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Mt. Vernon Republican (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1854), 1865-09-19

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MiiiiBwwaiiaiiaaiaiair''"M,'MMMM'''www','1'IM,l,',,Mim III. MI 3 ft' tl 1, f: .V .V 41 A X : 1 I raw. r 7 f i VI V. r f Hi V&hoii1 'Eopublican; A rAHU.Y WKWSPAPKR. , ,r. i ' t ' . .-v I )!. M WV. T0. V.MJ ADVANCE J o VM, TvJJASCQM. oriiiToa, rtiataiia a irMtoa, i i- ... i- . J . i rricc in tiucvtrN block, no. , iu stort. V' i All kinds dona yrnarf , ha inferior stria, W b paid . fcr on d.llve ry. 8. M. ft H, Tl. R.-C1UN0B 0? T1MB. : The Winter arrangement on the I. II. k N, B R. hM vtiura lld, and tha tinsel for, leaving Vt, Vernon are M . Allows; ' i ,, (n' , ! '. t. ...... t Txtisi ooixo aoovc . .; Jcuoramnuattoa learea...... 4:0 av M, ipnn 10:11 r. a. nun aoio itohti. ""' 4M leavee -. .....1:40 T. M, , Accommodation- reaTea 7:41 A ah Isprcs. leave,. ....-i...-.-.. -.... ..7:08 A. at. f-T C.f (jn Uil .Ctirttal Ohio rjoad teavf yVewri aa follows; i I'.1.: if) i t ) J : .4:30 r. . ...12:00 M. ....2:12 1. x. Oxtiie P. 0. k 0. fd going Ept, th ri lvo , - '-..i ..1,4..:. AlKoo J . AaU tt'it, Jao oothi CitM' lV9:'t Jejr Ityr n ftlioro. CHUB.C1T MiECTOKy'J At'Pl'' TmWff. ritTV'- my.vr. Trtief n e.t . McKnli, RrTice Trr KabhilK lit H n clork A, K.ii1 Jl o'clock P. M. Snbbntli Schnol t 'oVrH:k ,-A. h. S;i ,: vS- ki.ik b. MorKrr. . iVANORUCAI,. MTTIlRltAV rnrKcn. .. . ( Slnet RfT. J. r. rW.ARErT. Pamir. MESBTTERIAN Cfll'RCir, oornr f!r and riict. ttrt ..... . HKRVEIT. i BETH(msT EprscoPAr. ciirnrni !! nr and 'heathnt atVteta. Roy. K. II. Dl'.JH. PROTERT.tSf EPISCOPAL ClIHRCn. rorner Oajr nil High trtt, Rpt GEO. B. REESB CATnoKJlB CTTORen.-feorniT Hlrh- awt Mrlfn', , -jj R,. JUMPS BRF.ST BETHOMST PRnTESTAIfT cni'RCH. Muhanlra atrtetjbctireott Vlnf and rtf'K. . . BAPTIST CHI'RCir, Tlnatropt. W'n MnlH'rrr and Mcbanica Rpt. .T. W. IC1f RARUER. eONHREOATIOKAI. CIU'BCIT. Mtilliirrr t.. tMtwr-n Sngvand Hmtramlc. ReT T. E. MONROE. SITED PREBVTERIAX. fnrm'r Mnln and fiiTtar atraeU. . . . Kn, H. M. HHTCHWOK. llRTHOOtsT -WESLKVAH ClirnCrT. ri.f 11,1. . lwrrand Wnwto-w j i ,1T' T, TR. TR.irN. KRsMLIlf BUSINESS CARD. KCILX. 5o.lvIIX.Iii3, , JVhuleaal auJ RctMl Pfalert in 300TS & SHORES, ' " l.rUTiiea, Kit xn FIxaiNoa, - S. T.1 T-A-XiOIt, 5o CO. 1' V 1 t P ' I- JL "V- -I firy fiomls and IVolians, ,. - .iJ., , t PAY CASH FOR ' .. BUTTER, EGG3, RAGS, &C. i ATTORNEY ,, ., , JtNt) c6VXSE,hUOn AT Id'?, DUNN & SNOW ; . ir tmittitisftl . . PAOTINO, GRAINING V Miss JL A. DONNELLT, Ml Vr-nnn, March 21. ISiWy! : CEO. W. MORGAN, . Aitoruoy ut Lnw, , ." OFFICE Ovfr th Shoe Stnrf of MllUr WWto,. JIOCNT VERNON, OHIO '. ' Krnvh Jtaf. lMS-ly ' -MATICH 9th, 1864. ' WARNER MILLER, . ... .... , M HKL'EIVIN'a FRESH NEW GOODS - Pur hi'l n'tiro Ort Pfctiiio lo Pilrr. AH M Zh li, iZ. . '!... ITAU.N'KR.Hll.I.ER'fl. ; MfLLIWERY. Hit k. .Tohusoii, , llVf rnWer iwoT 2il HW oo) iiiViHnw. A RS pre' oied to do Work In thenm.l approved tyle. either In traw, Silk, or Crape. They keep a good a.irtment of Ribbons and other Trimins. Mar Wn ; . 1 4 j ,U t.iii 1 : ' i OrvLvRi! BROWN, z r4mUthiolMiyiei;lati, OFFICE-Woodward Building, ll.tln Street, Jfaln, nMj, 7 n v ' V IT. t'EWON, 0, amsricaTj house; i. H0S3 HAMLIN it CO. PRopRttnonii. ao mu.1, x. ) .. NEWAItK, OHIO. L. ian!la i, V tiaanAS, (June 20, lll8S-ly ) 3YALTER; L: SIMONS, '"'"ATTV at LAW. A ND X 0 fA It Y lTJi L I C, , ' OFFICK-Ove'r John ticnnfy's Clothing Slptf ) ' M iln street. Kill write fe,l;, Settle F.', oll(,c, nic ano at .ted to hi. and attend prompt ?iiy 19 una 20. lUKA-lr. : r). .-WLn -f- , 0VII!1IPTI0H TVINCHKSTER'8 OENUtNC HY ; POI'llOSWilTfS (Ibe only reliable enrm of lr archill'a' nWdj. ha attained a leputnllon in the e of Coosumytloo, nunaralleled In the annuls nf cdlclne." As a oetvons tonic, the llynophophit-a ' Paioaa; In T and If) ex. bottles, II 00 and 12 gaeb. 6 small or ir lar area botUe. for U, ky eanreaa. a drt;giau, and at the Mie'geae- lod r.tnll kv Hold ) by all rear espei eubli fU dspot, woolowileaftil r, mil tie i. WIWCHKSTKR. Mioha 84. N. Y. -i '(' hrr,sry14, UHtVly. i . ;??:;::i.APIKS..:: V' , ,'.'..,. Call fo ;of .-.( cDR ESS GQOO.S. : - , AT . ! -. i -. i . y -t , . . ,,-.,..,..... ,t :V: 7itrncr Xlillers, : ; 1 ' " ' " Ps has the Cheapest (Tow. ' y, t Feb. ji; Jrsr!l tnROJ'filirWA.rT 'enrad tf Nervoaa ' p.tillltr, V. PrnsturT OiifAf ard the erfe It nt rmtbfil la to fnro iUtr will, th kn"4att of cum, ( v ' I charge. ) Tim reiff'i it HsnA- r, rtd rl"t 1 for foil paj'jiAr, bj "r' j- PB Ire sqperlorto anithint; horetnlftro , wniie r f".ee.of general deVilHv, lneenf alrrngih, ih and ap. elite, dvupepela. nfAitSlglV, parilr.la. ehmnle brim, hitiw a.'thma, axrofala'ft Is'the nint efflcaclona tn at-' pient known. A fair trial ia a certalo cure. (Clrenlars tree. I VOL, XI. . ..... DOUBLE TRACK HOtVTE. , .':. :( , .... nut t :' v ' , 1 i. . ' PITTSBUEGH TO PHILADELPHIA From Jtll portion" of the U'cat, Norlh-Waat an4 tiouth-VToat, tbia Una and 1la connurtiona form aitbar tha aborteat or tho beat route to Pbiladel. pbia. New York, Boaton, Battlnior. and Wanbinglua.- The traveller may with conflilruce rely upon nure ena nncttoa. high apeedwith perfeet aafety, and rvery an-fifiniKe Tor comfort that cun bo briicured. New and elegant paaiienger cara, for day ana night service, baro reeDtly been added to the cuulnnteut vf the. Ftnuayl rania Central Rail Ri.n.l. At I'lttnburgh, trkina frowi the Wert ran direct to fho riilnn Depot, where panaenger are trariferred to ttia Trai a of tha Pennevlvaoia Central Railway, which ;vave I'ittabitrgh and arrive at other point, a follow.; . MAY KXPKESfll-Leavea Titteburgb at 2.50 A M.. elO'p(ne at Principal Station..' Arrives at AltoonaO r.60 M.t Tyrone 44 A. N. (U.llefoote 10 32 A. H Lock Haven 12.00 P. II.,) Ilarrleburgt at 1.10 P. ll.Klmnretatt.4KP. H., New York, via All.ntown, at 10 20 P SI., Philadelphia aU&P, If., and New Yolk, via Philadelphia., at W.ST . M. ' ;.1 ' " M A IL. LIME.LraTea Flit.h'nrg at' t So A. V., topping at all regular Stationa. - Altoonat at 11 46 A. M , liirrl-blir Oil P. M., arriving at Philadelphia at . Il.aoi', JI,, and Nev York, via ?liiUJtl,i,)et joe lTTSnVRn AND F.KIK &AtU i Eeate. Pittahargh (at 1.S0 P. H. Slopping at nearlr ail Station . Arilrea at Altoonat at T.20 P. M Qariia-burg LaSrA, . anil Pkiiadelptiia at 40A. H. 1'IIILADFI.PIIIA KXPUESSVU,, PUUbnrghal4.Vtr.il. .Kipping only at Princiial Sta-tioiin. Arrive at hAtmUt A 10 P. M , Altoona at H U P. II . Harri.burgaf 2 it A.M. Raltimore T.00 A U., New York, via Allentown. 10.00 A. U.. Philadelphia at 7.0.1 A. M., and New Torkt 'a Philadelphia, la. 00 M. Slrrpivg Cart run through on t bin train from Pittsburgh to Baltimore aod Philadelphia, aa1 to ew York via Allintown r . r - FAST I.INK-rT. Pltt.hnrgh at'a.30 P. If. Stopping only at principal Stationa Arrive, at Altoona Ht2 3'l.t. II.. Hnrpiubnrg' at7.iW A. M., Baltimorof at 12 20 P. M., Ne Ynrk.f via Alli ntown, at 2.4S P. M., Philadeiphiat. 12 60P.U and New Yorkt via Philadelphia, at 8.42 P. M. final font. t Dinner. ; t f upper. 4Vtr,i7y. all nthe r traivt Suvdnyi txnptei. : TICKETS F'lff Af.E TO BOSTON BY BOAT OX RAIL. ' hiiat tii kkts ooon nsr a5t oF tok norxo li!. F.tt8 TO Ai.Ii P0IST8AS LOW A8 AKX ROriU. sriEBifra- cabs;, m 0?( XIOMT THAl.fH TO PI! t AD'A NEW YORK & BALTIMORE. B.1GG.4GE CHECKED THROUGH J)X!) rit.l.YsEEKHED FREE.' THE PK.N.XriVl.VAMA UAU. KOAD CO. i Will nut avuinr un rlk fr Hh:m(, except for Wear iiikf Apparel, anil Im. -it tbrii r "j(-iinibility to Ope llui. Ujtl ifi,)nrx in vn u AH U-vitiia excM-dimr ihni nn- iinllji viiliif, will W tit tb of tha fwottr, ault'M FB EIGHT. V By IW Rente Kreiulitiiiirivll Ut-i.criiit.n ran he -.fne- wanlL'il In ami f oin Pliiliiili..lii., .New York, Ronton ol Hallimtirc, tnanil friuii an.v'pi. nt on tii Raflroada of nbio. Kentucky. Iiiiliunn lllinoii, Wifcooein, Iowa oi Mi.iiniiri. tig Huitntatl tliitrt. 1 lie 1'ruiiv.Yliuiiiu (N-ntrnl 11.11 R"e! almi connect, at Pitteburgh wilb Slenniere. by n liii-b tiood. can be for wiirded l nny luvenuUlt- i.ori on ilie Ohio, Mii.kinguin, reunemie , Cnml'i-r'nn,!. Illiiioin .Ui.t.jMiippi, Mimtourl, rk.n.lKand Hi-il llivi: am: nl Cleveland, Simduiik mil t:iiiriico with isieaim-nt to nil ports on the North-Western Ijikee. I MerchanlN mnl .iHlpiH'r1 Mii3i.tiiig the transportation of tli.lr Fr,lli.i t-i tlnKi'tunyi?', cmi rely with confl-dence on itpce'li lr.ii..it. TIIK HA I'M OF FRKRH'IT In and fMin nny point' la the Weal,- hr the P.'linlvuiiiCentrnl Rail Kni.fl art al til liif 'it fntutiilr ii, nr- it. ui-d by other Itait Jivad t F pirlicnlar t,i (rvwh p ekgea yiA I'lli i ijktkai. K. H. rur Fri-ight Cntrart-or.Priipl'Ing Pfreellons, upplj tu oc adilresH either of the iulUiwljig Afco.Vi o(the Com-i'auy: S. R. K lf!?TO. Sr.. freight Agent. Phila.Ta. ' ' 0. A IfAttPKSTF.It. FrelOt Agent, Pitt.burgh CI.AISKK l.'ll . Trnn.ler A gent, Piltsbllrgh. II If. UIIIIWN k C . Cincinnati. Obln. R C. Ml .iRI'M Cp., Haillson. Indiana, i , .. MllltKHKAl! & CO.. r.iniivlll, Kentucky. . . M AIMVA V. Kvenr Mo. fad. H. F. HAS S ffk St. r.i.uih, Mlwooil I'l.AHKK . CO.. Chicago, tllinota, J. II. Mi Cl.l.M. (-iirtMiioiilh, 1). .1 i(. I.IIVK. lliivuvllle, Ky . , ll.tr.l At tl. UnHetta. O. ' i i K AYUKS. ln-k ngnni River. ti .. '. II ft K. 1. I.ANiU.EYrCalllpdli., 0. II. , PltRCKft fl. !4nnerilla, 0, . . J flf M lM!on.in. Hipeiy, u. . l .1K..UIUL1I , Oenoml Travelling Agent. LIVpfsTOCK. tii'i'fprV iurl Fat-tiiem will ftnH tliikt mnut kiWunt r t'txiK idnt'if frr f.U Hturk. ( pf Ifttifl Ynrds, well J wiitp nril Ptif itirfl with fviry eonvenfenff , hare iTimiiin in i"'. n inr-r wmii. rrrm narrinDurjf, wlicrr nlll h lonti.t rvi'i-v mnvptilpnce for fncllnif n1 rrnttMff. arhil-plnntT..n''.l of I'll I J.Al'Er.PHf A, NKW roKK n-i. MAri.MfHK WAItKKTH. ThlKwill )nob fAun'l trii ivinrht. ittilrht-ett (vnd iriniti direct rmitit for Slork to Kcv Yrfc frla Alhuroffril auU itl fewer cliatiirri ibnn tiv ntht't. fc.Vrt H I hH'l'',i:' rM Stiiirrin.fntli'nt. Altoona. Pa MK.VIIV tt'.-(lfl INKKH. Cfir'l Tlckat Ajrent, Pbila : H. II. HfU'Slt.lJcii tKreiht Agent, PhU, MOtmT VERNON i UNION BRASS BAND. riltt is IttMt i. now completely organised, and In 1 rood h-illihi- emiiiiiiin, H has a choice selection ol .Mu-ic an under competent instruction has arrived :it pr,.oici.iir in its muslcnl execution. Itiareadyto rill all calls fir rouslrH-Herviroii at home or abroail, on rvnaonable term, either for Cotillion lrtiea or for Brass Mn.ie. W, U. T.IOMPrOX, PlO.i'l. C. P. (InanoiiY. See'y .. S. 0. Rrr. Lender. (ftee. 10. lP64r. . Howard Association. . . .. : I PHILADELPHIA, PA. Dlneften of the Nenrotiu, r3onlnl,TJrlniiry and Sexual Syatema new and reliable treat ment in Jteporte f tho HOWARD ASSOIIIATION Sent by mail in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge. Adilreaa. Dr. J, SKMXEN H0UI1IITON. Howant Asao-elation. No. 2 S.uth Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Doe. th.1AMr. - - - - ' -...', KENYON HOUSE, turner of MuluSL and the Public Square, , MOUNT VEllNON, 0. HlVI.Vfl I.puvdthlu well known aoil popular Hotel, and fit ted It nu in Superior fltyle, I am prepared to aci'iun modal trtivelra anil all otheni wbo ma)- friTame calk Tbe paLnaniee Of the Piililie ii rttiiofictrully mt-HclM. ' JOSKPH SCAHUUOUVM, CANOEIUDOOTOR, ; ' ' 5 f ' ' Or CLEVKLAVD. W0T,D Inrnrmall wlio mnj be iflltcttd with Caacer that be is prepare.1, to cure yiat formldahle die tare by aprurcM tlitTerinir from all Jtberft known only tn hi miie If, liii treatment oonM'ta Id tha application asH(l nlwtf, eompoaed of Kurnpean hertm, eaaa 1 05 littls ar do Mia. lt aamiutftira be will ha able to say to the patient wbetl(;r tlieircaae ia curable or not and will guaranty aprnaeit ear of all be tin-iltiftakee. A1"- vtll joarrapta refmafiept cut Id tl WM caw q! Rh,nm.fn. . , RBrBRRxeie Mm. 601 ael Key, Qeo MaiU)ler, X R. Hum It, and t)avld More, Mt Vernon. 0.; John Uallj, Ccntrrbnrf, Knox Co., Ohio. irnoa-At his renidence, Bedford, Cnjahoga, Co., 0., J J lailea Souh of Qie-Tlami. ( 1 ;Jal , lnt$-f lr:itHYI,I-Cornt. Vartn. Uuntnon, "Hair or 1 V 'p1j 'rnm to c?ntl esroi Cancera of ptry rlety ru ml or no ebarr4 Feveriit Oholeraronr-hna. Acmte Khenmatlitni and Cholera In Ike citr tbe SaMeot being uadpr40 Teareofage-will not be charged nlt'M cared. (Syphilitic aid 0oaorhral Piieaaen per-mrnerttljr and cnnfldentially cared nr the money refund ed. All old Sore. ami Ulcere healed en. PriniteOonMillation frtm and tlrvtly confldenlial. A'WretM pot. $X bit. Vroon. O. Office on Tine H., M rtvl" Kait of Hevi tret. DR. J. H. UPFlCKft. Jane 37, IMt-ljr. , - A' iliff JTFLUXQ RE8T0RKDI IflNORANCB EXPOSED ' v fAI.i.lUkd UMIAMikU! . t. irhlr Ituaerteit to both eexee, married or ringle, lb braitb or diteeee. Da. Laot Parte, London, end NewYoebMBAical AdTtiar and Warritr Guide. Sutb edition 4tt P$i pearly 1X Anatomical Illoptratlona, upon Ueotal aud Nf rvooe Vility, Vrinary Depoeitr, lnroltwtaey ,n ef Beptew. Iropoteocy, ITectionii n the Bledlerand Kidney a, (.ttnitn Vriiiry diwa-ee, eel thlTefitPvtittncta, the anatrmiy ef the aexuai orrend of the mft'entfemalp-fe-1atfnt nrteerfbeeirt nhrtioloirr Ruropnn bwiTifiUl pracHce Wh'. their recipe ann r;cine tha Atnaarl eni"vlf, rar-a ami j.or d- 0 trT4tment, hi., Mailed reefr 1 1. (W, clonty teeltd. Alt -who would avoid naintceeefful and bacharnal treatment with Mrrury, Copevia, Injf ctont, Oautert-Mtlnen, Qiraek H peel He, Aatidotea. Inntnimenta, An, rhnnld Jtorrhaw thin Briirinal work of tbe pabiUher, 8 WAUNKH No. 1 Vflmey etreAt, pe American Hew K. 121 iStneaa St., er cminilt the Doctor. No, 17 Oredway. apetaire, New Yrvrt., from 10 k M. to A p. M "AVi riqur wUb other pApern ; recommendiBn Da, LARMdNTand hie work." 't.Mnr Mat 'mi, Otr tow tti It'f-.rMt tXtptfeh, Stantt ZitU&g. Atlas, Mt4 aJ Br-ij. if M7 . HrtMr. Aycr'3 Cathaitb filisi i 1 1- 1 .:i.l i :! ' 'i( MOUNT VEllNON, OHIO. TTTESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 18G5. r ,i For tho Rapubllean.) . !.-., , :'; t. ABitt icAat '-lii ) If in ooorso of your iravala yoi avor should eon To Braadoa, Just wiaka It a point . .tij ;.. To itay there a week, to visit tha lown, For 'twill nay yon without any doubt. .. i. ... 1 . - ' ; ). ' Wo one had a "tar.ro," but It's goiie br the board, For you know "Uncle Sam" thuughl It best To extract from its keeper a sb.fa of his hoard By way of a "Kcenn" at least.; . i . il Not being a frlebd to "Uncle Sam ", P'D Of clearing the country from deb'. Ho closed up his doors and took down his. alga, 1 So you o w'vo do tavern, M yet . , ,;,., ; , "i ...... , . ,. ' But ydult find generous hearts alt oter the town, " tVholll ho happy to tak4 you as guest . ' . 'iJ Kut your huslDmwtT conrie you'll espeot will be knowai For ova hra it, ad llls all the res,. , .( If in yoor travel yoor hoot sbodld giva-' way, Just cAll.oA JoIro Smith over there j .,7 (You'll Hud bin ft home, for bo 1 there night od ilfty I, He'llf it or make a ct pal,r. ' . J... ,., ... ::, - ; ... ,! j . , 'I- '!' . Oiparli.ns y may travel In a more wooVm way, , Aud your b.rRc hecume fractious anil run ; Your boggy "sniasheil op" and strewn by thf way, YuuiliArnesafureter umlvine j J ! : r. ':. Rhn right Into Ike Colemsn's right then on (he direct, But stopI guess ho's not there ; ' "i ' But If you can And him he'll fli It complete, , ii Just aa well as thy do anywhere. , r. ' If the tire should want setting, or blacksmlthing done, 'Motetter"ls always on hand, , His "shop"' is down street just a llttlo beyond, . k Us always does work that will stand, , ,f your harness it ripped In various w.vn, .1 No oialtfr how bad it may be, , 1 ; ; . Just carry It over to Yaasy Hays, t j-Holl Ax It M "sMfal a Bea," : ' I. .1 ; ; "; ! We bare also two stores and a PnstpATce, too, , Which you'llvlait of course while you stay, , And if nim'm" cant soil you goods, that will du, Why "Jesse's" Just over tho way, I 7 I '. " .1 . .' I And If Jesse'J not in. his aon-in-law Don , Will attend to your wants right away For he tnakoa it a point to be always on bund, ' Hi) matter what Hod of a day. , .; ' ' 1 We bare 'wo splendid churched and icbuol-h,ui,5e to ' toot, ' ' - ' Where we rfot ill thf knowledge we can ; , Our preachers are Hucb I know they will ivit, j And our icbnnl can't he beat in the land. ' ,i , v. .i ... : ,. .. 1 r . J ; That mill which jou cec thin iltlc of the trenra ', In ownvd by the 'ductftt" ;nd QUIie " " ',. f The machinery i aew and in propelled hy atoam.. ua 11 Biakei u;uitf a help to the place. ' ' A Botanic the doctor was odcc, but It weme Tliat h(t did'iHltke erl 8 and root pilli, 80 he Ariel a new plan (which n ThomrnnnV) of ntcptii, ud bcoM ion ! U powef makes (te mill. , . Rut hark f whjr the clock U juit striking two' re, And f must retire for the night ; ' ' ' " " So I bid you gond-hye, boning next wLen we meet 1 all all be In a mnch bet tec PllgU1' JtBAMiox, Aiifiust 29, 1865. total Jtovt(.A ' A Slight Mistake. : 11AYK TIIIN09 EXPRKSSI.Y UNOKKSTOoY). .1 bad niDiJo up my mind to it, mid when once niy mind is made op it was as good as dotio. Thnt's what I thought th d, but since then, I've changed opiniou somewhat, aud have ncknowledgfd myself a firm-believer in the old guying. "1 here's ninny slip"&c.; &c, and the homely but truthful1 reuiurk of my old Auut Eunice, who nlwuys checked me iu my pfojitiVo assertions with "Tut, tut, child; it's the ensieHt thing in the world to be mistaken j we are uqtcftre of anything, my dear, unless we have swallowed it, and can neither get it up nor dowai-' " 1 Jt was a spleuOid morning just such a morning as 1 love above all others a delr-cious, cool bracing air,, and a bright sun coming from the trees in the' road, ranking th frost glisten like thousands of diamonds, and giving promise of a comfortably warm dojj in place of those sultry, hot, siefcenipg' ones which August bid brought us. A, 'glance from my chamber window out across tbe shining river to the fields beyond made me tire of everything in doors, and determined ine to have half a holiday, so .1 set my wits to work to devise avplun for having au nfternoou overflowing with enjoyment - la the first place yon nmst know we had a sister living iu the country, about two miles from towu. with whom llame Nature is always so bountiful.' I knew all around and above that long walk to the orchard hung groat clusters of luscious, purple grapes, an 1 iu the orchard the trees were laden with the choicest apples, while on the ground the great hellflowern, pipping, toppy bawkins, maiden blushes ana raaibos. lay in confused and tempting heaps, ,1'hcn the pear tree and melon patch were there, and everything else that is nice aud good. Yes, sir ; 1 was going to rusticate and revive my drooping spirits under my sister's 'vine aud fig tree,' (apple tree rntjier,) that very afternoou. That settled, set ahout my studies with unusual vigor, and had dinner on the table u half hour before Harry's plug bad turned the corner ind hove in sight. - ' When we were comfortably seated I broke tbp siltnee by faying in the meekest manner imaginable : .... .. - Mlnrry, I should' like to have some apples for baking to morrow." ' . ' "Very well, I will send some around this afternoon." ; ... ' This was very kind, but I was not satisfied. "Harry, are you going to b very busy this aftornocn t" ' "Not partioiilarly, why V . ' ' "Oh, nothing, only 1 thought if yon could get wagou aud go to Eva's it would be just a pleosaut little drive, and you kuow that their ripples are much better than any we can bay ; besides 1 am sore Clara would love dearly to go, then you knew you coild bring something for father, just as well as not, and. he has no time to go fot theia." : He looked pleased ; I was 00 tbe ' right track, to I kept on so diligently that when, ha banded bis cap for the third cup o coffee, be said ) . i ; : , .-: i '. . : K,.r Well, I will soe ifJ can get a Tagon." 'Epppose you go down first and eee if Clan cun go," 1 said, as he finished, aud away be weut, whistling-, wbila V began setting tilings to right, and mnklng preparations to start. He Was back iu a twiukling.. " .--' 'Clara would like to go. tho snys, but Liz-r.io Dean is there to spend' the day, aid. she cannot leave her.",.-.. - . '...'.' ' ""Then tnke her along. I am sure she would enjoy it The more the merrier, you know," I said, growing rnot wonderfully benevolent at the contemplation, of the pleasure in prospective, '" ' i s ', : '" i'.' "Very well," unil ha wan gon? for the wog. on. , My diligent morning' work bail left me nothing to do. so tliuc by . the time I saw Hurry coming with the wacon I was ready and witltlng. II drove past like a Dash." I watched him until I euw him drive up to futhor'egatfl, , help tho two tlolijhtcd girls in pud turn, then I stepped buck to put ou my hat and clouk. I did not think it necessary to go to the door till be drovo np, so I stood very complacently looking around at my pleasaut sitting-room, aud congratulated myself oa having everything done up 10 -nicely, and being so reiidy to go, inbre completely ready tlutu since I bud been hoosekcepinii Must tbeu a wagou passed, und running to th door a was just in tune 10 near a gay laugh which enme fiuuting buck from the girls a whiz and whirr of the wagon wheels, und they were round the corner and out of sight.-' : I could scarcely rjelieve my eyes, so I gave) them a vigorous rub, looked down' thou np the rosd, but it was too true,-th'iy wore out of sight , , i,., . ! 1 turned and crave the door a push which closed it with a bung, and made things rattle again ; then I gave an- impatient stamp, end two Umrs rolled down either cheek. 1 could not help it ; it was su.ch a disappointment alter so many pleasant anticipations, then I commenced wulkiug the Hoor "very calmly through a. great storw Of crushed expectations, aud frustrated pluns went whirling through rov bruin. ; Tbe momeut 1 saw thcr were rcully irone, uud I was left aloue, I remem bored distinctly thut iu alt my conversation bad never suid one ward about going mysef, und I could not roally blame Harry very much, though sijeutly culled dolt, stupid uud several other not very afiectiouato numoa which I wold v,o baye allowed, any one else 10 say lor worm My first impuhe was to wulk after them ; the next was to sit down quietly and go o with my knitting as though nothing Imil unopened, but thut would not do it would make mutters worse. So I started out aud wulked as thouirh ou a race, nntil great beads of Dertmiratiou stood ou my lureueail, and 1 was panting for breath. . 1 culled at my aunt's ut tho other end of town, but could not say a word of disuppoiutmcnt, for my lips quivered t tho thought of it. I went to tbe Tost Office, aud was ready to veut my anjer ou the P. M . because he lil . pot givo me a letter, thouifh I was uot expecting one. At Inst tired out with my exertions to get rid ofmyself,-1 wended my way homeward, and threw myself on the sof, went to sleep aud dreamed that the po.ir horse pud wagon had been turned to un uir bulloon, and that Marry and the girls had gone in it to Utah to join tho Latter Day tmt while I wag buried in one great betjp of melons, pears, and peaches, from which 1 could not extricate myself, uud I was cjjokiirg to death on cider-which sister Eva ai d her husband were compclliusine to swal low. My trouble was so great that' I awoke with a start, and seuted myself at the window. The suu was just going down to rest ; you all have seen the beautiful clouds of crimson and gold, the fiery bine and wbito, all so richly intermingled, tnal wiuie yon guzo yon cannot help wondering if Heaven can be morebeautiful.'- I sat silently contemplating all this beauty, und thinking how 1 could have en joyed the ride iu the country, when round the corner came tbe rcspectuble trio who were uppermost in my mind, seemingly in tbe best of spirits (and why should tboy not be?) They drove gaily np to tns rroni aoor, ana my uu conscious husband hsudnd out a sack of beautiful apples with the self eatisQetl air of one who bad done tbe cleverest thing imaginable, . , 1 greeted him with, "you (ire a nice young man," in a tone that startled him and made him turn upon me with eyes lull or inquiry, "What's the matter now f" . "That was a splendid trick iu you, to drive off in that kind of style and leave me standing with my h it on, waiting for you, wasn tit? ' He looked bland. Tbe girls both exclaimed: Why Nettie did yon iutend to go ? .They asked why you did not come, and Harry told them you were too .busy." ;. "Upon what authority, sir, um you make that excuse for me t" - "Why, indeed. I don t kuow : I thought you said so ; and I am Quito sure you did not guy you intended going.' .. . . . . . Ho was astonished at his mistake, aud drawled out his words like 6 penitent school boy;' ' ' 1 - "Vou must have thought me a model of disinterested affection to plan a whole forenoon for the 8uko ol fiudiog an excuse fur sending you off to the country to spend tho afternoon with two young ladies, wbilo I was at borne at work." I scolded till I bad to stoop for wont of breath. Harry was eilonl and went to tne wagon ana nrugut me a basket Of eood things which sister Eva had cent, and presented them with the sir of one who was making a ponce-ouenng.' ., Then wo all laughed : but to do them jus tice. I must say that they did not seem ta enjoy it more than myself, and that was very little, aiy disappointment 'was 10c severe. The grapes nnd pears were very sour to my taste and 1 inuciea tne npptes uiu uui cook good. 1 1 bavo made a great many visits to the coiiutry since, though none of them have ever made reparation for that disappointment aud 1 buve always thought that my health was not quite so good as it would have becu had it not been for that stupid mistake which my careless, good-heartoi husbuud made. , .j A Word lor Newspapers. .. AVe clip the following article from n ex change. It is true, and we commeud it to every man who has an interest, in the place wnere ne rtsiueg. xuimug it muni vuhiujuu than to bear people talk of what they pay newspapers for advertising, &.O., as so much given in charity : "Nowspapergj liy enhancing the value of property m their neighbor hood aud giving tne localities w wntcn ipey are nubliubed a reparation, abroad, benefit all such grumblers, particularly if tboy are mer chants or real estate ., owuers, tarice iub amount of the meagre su,m they pay for their support . jesidesv every public- spirited citi ten. has ft lnidablo pride in haxing a paper of which he ia not ashameoj, even though be should pick it up in New York or Washington A 8 lookiag thriving sheet helps to sell "property, gives character to tb hofnlity (UigVlfl M U respects ou dfakalile public convenience, ( Don) any caas the matter (a the local or editorial tolnmus should not be) quit up to your standard, do not east it aside aud pronounce it of no account, nntil von are satisfied that there has- been no more labo beatowed npon it than is paid fdr. )f yo want ft good readable shoot, it paust be supported;'. And it ntust noi be supported, in a snirit of charity either, but because vou feel aheccssity to support it. The local press is tue "power tuai tnoTes win people.-.;- 1 i , mm n 1 . Two bard things, first, to talk of yourtclf without being vain ) second, to talk of others without slaoder. ....... . " The1 "Morgao who was nominated hy the Confederates ladt week, was not the Morgan who escaped through a 'gnp in the Ohio Fcnitentinxy, but the one who escaped through tbe "gap", of the Comberlanoi Mountains. , - . ' '" " "" . Tbe Soldicn all for tue I'nlon ! ' ' (' ' Knox Cawxtv, 0, 8opt, 18C5. :Mrt. Editor : I would like, through tfio columns of .yont paper, to publish a fow thoughts that may be fintereat to your read ers. I hero are many good Union men woo are doubtful as to which party the soldiers will assooiato themselves with. And men on the other hand, the "Confederate Democracy" boast that the soldiers will vote with them. My acquaintance in the army isfnojtvery limited, fur I have the honor of having been a member-ot a good regiment for nearly four years, and I an? glut to any that 1 kuow nono of that class of soldiers among my associates that will vote with the party thut bns opposed tho Union and the Union party. Tbete will bo one class Of men that belonged to the am once, hut in thu hour of danger that tries the norves of brave men, when -all hands were needed nt their costs, they were cot there ; they had listoned to the treasonable advics of . , ... J J ,,. tne laiso Democracy, ana ueserieu tueir com. radus in nrms- they will vote now with-tbe-purty they acted with during the war.-They nave made a mean nnd. disgraceful bargain, aud we would not adviso theni -to break it now. 1 They have' tukon to the left uud the true soWier will go to tbe right, with the Union party. , , "VVliy, I ask do they expect us to vote with thea now? Is it became we bavt closed the war. successfully withtut any of their aid? Is it because that rhile we we fighting down tbe rebellion they were buoying it up that wbilo we were crushing the hopes of the rebels they were trying to sustain them, inspiring our fo.es with false, expectations, urging them on to new cruelties, end deeper, darker trimet of trensou and infamy ? Is it because they met in Chicago ip convention assembled in 18(14, and there unanimously dcclarod "the War a Inilure (" while we were then far duiWO iu Dixie, strikiug the blows iq the very heart of Secestiia, at a fearful sacrifice of human life, but with a devotion and energy that knew no such word as fuil ; that so soon afterward made "Jlllanla owt and fairly won" that made tbe rebellion begin to experience its death agonies, and the hearts of our foes both Noith and South beat fainter and weaker than ever before ? For all these man-; Testations towards us, what shall we soldiers render unto them ? Seven, thirties without taxation, or shall we put on the tariff as they desire ? ; '. Ob false Denocracyl foster : not your blighted hopes with the vain thought and useless expectation that a patriotic uud devo ted .soldiery will uuite their suffrage with yours, for it will only lead to disaster and defeat as ignomiulAus as your crimes of treason in the.past have noen neinous and lutamous, Arroy yourselves beneath your boasted banners of the Jf'r fimr Democracy, with your favorite inscriptions, "Free press' and freo speech r suspension or tne writ oi hqbcQt torput " ''No more Drafts P "Bcsis- . .... ' I" - I" X-.. uince 10 COIiScnptiuq i -iut u wuu uur a dollar to curry on the war," 4c ; then call for "the exile" that, "watched over the border ;" then, to the tnne 'there comet a poor exile" withdraw from the civilized world ; assemble iu Holmes county, kneel with your mouths in the dust and cry "uucleun, unclean" for the next four years to come. Ami then, after all these repeutunt FulTnrings and humiliation- return uud uslt tbe Union soldier if he cannot forgot and forgive f And you shall hear the welcomo reply of "Ir award breth re, go in peace ; we caunot go with you ; if yon are uungry we- win give you moai ; you are thirsty we will give you drink if you ask us to go a mile we will go with you two but vote with you we never can : "Vktkran. . Our National Debt . '. The United States are burdened with greai Public Debt, Iu aggregate, when al outstanding liabilities are fairly adjusted, will not fall below Three Thousand Millions of Dollars. Thq returned value of Keal and Personal Estate throughout the Union was, by the Census of I860, Sixteeu Thousand Millions of Dollnta, which we double to obtain tho actual value; aud this has not been essontially reduced; for, while the value of negroes as slaves has been struck out of existence, tbe real yalao of South-err) lands bat bbeo . increased thereby to at least en equal amount, and, while we buve been - t ,. . . ! .I. U ,1. I wasting ana ouruiug in tue ouuiu, wo nave been creating and improving in other sections, but especially in Colorado, Nevada, Montana and Iduho, where property worth Hundreds of Millions bos beeu developed since 1859. Ou the whole, we judge our aggregate Wealth to be just about Thirty Thousand Millions, so thut the Nutioual Debt is a general mortgage of about teu per ceut cu the cutire property of the country. : - - ;.' This Debt every impeniteut- Rebel, every maliirnant Copperhead, intensely hate, regard ing it as the cause aud means of their mutual overthrow. Had tbe Government boen unable to borrow,- the Rebellion could not have beeu put down; the Confederacy would ore this have been a fixed factr and by this time, the Demo cratic party iu every Free State would hare been fiercely struggling iota rccuusiructiou by the accession of their States respectively to that Confederacy. For it is idle to talk of Disunion save as a stop-gap a half way-house & transitory halt on a down-bill road, ' Not six mouths after the recognition of the Con federacy, every State reomiuiug in the Union would save , beeu convuisea oy a struggle caused by "the Demccracy" demanding that it adopt the Montgomery Constitution, make Slavery universal and eternal, and thus win admission into, the empire of Jeff. Davis Horatio Soymour vjauted New York to , do this in 18(11 ; Rouan M. Price publicly urged I. r .1- t.,j.. tO.i i ... iSOW Jersey to UU bu,iuuj;o vi uvuiaaiu IOO Democratic conchdutu for Governor) insisted, that, it ihe Uuioo tyei'e dissolved, tha dividing line should run North of 1'eousylvania. Dad as Disunion might bav been, it wat a light affliction compared with the impending peril of rf-uuion o,u the basis of Universal Slavery. And every man who secretly or opeply desired tuch reunion ia to-day iu bis heart a re-pudjtttort aud will twiudle the creditors gftb ltenublic if he ever khall see that he cua. . Our Financial endurance it the min cle of tho Yar. The world never taw its parallel. If every capable financier oa earth had been asked "How much money plight the Uuited States borrow during the progress or s great four years' war for the Integrity of the Union?" the average of tha answers wonld have fa-lea below One Biilioo of Dollars; yel we have borrowed nearly Three Billions much of it when oar tky wat black at miduight Uur yictoret may well excite glow of patriotic nrido; but the llebelliou't roal conqueror wat he who supplied, the money wherewith bur armies and ueets, were created organized, eoninoed, fed aud paid. : Our Fiunnces were a main object of Rebel attack. Rebel money wot 6mt to this City to be used iu betting op tbe premium on Gold. Copperheads and Rebels made large piles on tho increase of that premium, and lost litrger on itt decline. Edward Ji, Kelchum ruined his father's house aud lost Six Millions in try log to keep op tho pre.niutn after that bad be- . U.I. 'l'l... .. A M..;.,,... C0I11V lllipunoiuic . luus nvio eutim of Copperheadi tbroughout th country, each pledged to lake nojiart. oany Government 1 : WW N04G. loanj and to discailrage others from taking any One Copperhead Congressman who. was President of a Bavinirs Dank weut boote at a crit ical period aod insisted thut every dollar of the National Debt held by that liauk should be sold oat. There were Democrats who stood by their eomitry In Fiuonceal elsewhere; but tbe great mass of them avoided Government Stocks as if they bad been rank poison; they thought every oue who invested therein a fauutic or a fool; and they mean to prove him so yet.' ; - '-t i.-i ; Hence, we soe every Democratic State Convention exhibiting its ivory at the public creditors aftor this fashion: (V quota from the new platform of tbe Democracy of Ohio;) - j ."14. Retolved, That we most explicitly condemn the policy or the party ln power, iu creating thousands of millions, of dollars of government deht, and attempting to exouee, ate the holders thereof from all obligations to pay Uieir juat proportion of taxes for the sup- poit or the $tatH in which tuey reside; and thereby creatine An odious and privileged mon eyed rristocracy; and ; wo declare it to be the immediate duty of Congress and the .Estate Legislature to use all the legal and couatilu. tioual power they possess to subject money so infested to a burden of taxation, equt.1 to that imposed npon Other property for federal, qiiilo suu uiuuiuiyiw fuiiJuni-ej t., . Let ns look into this a minute: , t . n The Uuited States, iu pressing need of raon ey iu vast sums, offered certain inducements to those who would supply it namely, i: -a specified rate of interest; ?. Exemption from local taxation; it. inpayment at a ipecined day.;. Each of these is an integral port of the bargaiu mado with every holder ot a uoveru-ment bond the second oqually with the first add third. To subject those bonds to taxation would be as flagrant repudiation ns to rnfuse to pay the iutetest or the principle. He who WOUld tax them, in plain defiance of the contract, would refuse to pay them if he thought he could eucoecd in doing so. . , ' Every Copperbead and rtenel had abundant opportunities to take these bouds If he would. No questions were asked as to .the politics of subscribers: Jell, iiavis or.iiCe might nave had a Million by paying the stipulated price for them. And even to-day, when the peril Of failure in the War baa passed away, you can bny Seven Thirties at par, and some of the loaus below par. If you think the bondhold' ers havo too good a thing, remember that yon might bare been of them had you. choson may still be if yon will Walk up, gentlemen. ! 'Ihere'a no favoritismwno monopoTy l ,. . Hut consider the ainazjng folly, the sujcidal madness, of tho Copperhead demonstration. Our Debt it pearly all renewable nt early periods. . Not to speak of Dillion (uearly) of Greenbacks, which we ought to fund and re-tiro very toon, to 'bat wo may resume Specie Payment, we ow ; -; - -' 1 Amount literal. - Oft.. cent.... 6U.7BU.4uO 00. .4 per lent.... 23,D,!7 per cent.... TPJIen Pue. ..Tleceniber, lSST ' . .May, 1B67.I .On ten day's notice. 74,070,040 ,eu..n per cent. .un ten day'a notice. 3l.SM,2.'IO 0O..S per cant March, 1R04 10,000 000 oo. .8 per eent.,..Harcu, lano. 197l2i;0 00.. a percent.. June 80, lW.""-i . 234,400,000 00..7 t 10 per cent.. June 80, 1887. 6,0u0.0li0 00. .7t. lOpercent.. March 8, J8B8. ' . ' 800,008,000 00. .8 8. Ill per cent. .March 3, lSOO. , , liao.OOO.WO 00..7 t 10 per ct. (with gold eptloo at March 8, 1896. $t.704ll,348 49. , . We waut to renew all these at the lowest possible rate 4 per cent, if we can; certainly not higher than 5. If we could to day negotiate a long 4 per cent Joan of Two Billions, payable by installments' as our short loa.nl (all to, we might resume Specie Paymeut on the 1st of January next, and toon rcduw our internal taxes one-fourth to one-third, to correspond with tha reduced burden of our Debt. Every tax. payor, direct op iudiroct, it deeply concerned in our ability to fuud our short loans at a lawruta of inter est,9ince a reduction, from 6 to 4 per cent it in effect an extinction of one third of the Debt ., r : . . It tboie one man on earth to blind at not to see that suclf resolves as that above quoted are directly " calculated ' to " defeat ' the negotiation of a new loan at a low rate to ab sorb the existing loans running at high rates? Must not (very penny we take from the bondholders by local taxation be added to the rata at which future loans must be negotiated? Can we fund our Debt at all in an American Contol If such attacks on the National, credit ere persisted. iu,?--A". y, Tribune. t , ,t The Resolutions ol 179S. . , At tbe late conventions of both wingt of the Democracy at Columbus, the Virginia resolutions of 1798 were expressly recognized as the true exposition of the principles upon which our government was based." Wo have charged that these resolutions are the germ, the nest egg of secession, and rebellion. e know that they were sot np by Calhoun, and the South, as the basil of thoir notion! of State Sovereighty, and Ihatbefor nnd during tbe late rebellion, thoy were appealed to by the traitors, and- their rientfa andiympAibisers, m the great authority for tbcni in their acte of nullification and sccejsiorA. '; ' . ' It it thurefort important for all honest acok. ers of the truth to, ascertain boyond all question, or doubt, whether tbost Virginia resolutions do 0 to tbe extent claimed for (hem. If they do, if they recognize the right or a State to decide npon tha Constitutionality of the acts of Congress, aud to resist those laWt by the powers of the State, tbeo in our opinion tbey are boretical, wrong, and most mil-chiovous in thejr teaching! and tendoncy.'.'Wi aver that these resolutions oV teach Just ihesi things, and tbcreforo we denounce thorn'. But ttat our readers may have all the foe Is before tkem, we copy these rcsolaioo? eutirt Lot them be carefully preserved. ' '.' " i , l IROISU RISOLUTIOh'S Ot 1793. J?ront'nmr fit Men and btdiiion Lam to be Unconslitulional, and Defining tkt JRightt of the Stattt.l)ratcn by Mr, ' '"Lttui ViaolnuHersa or Cjiioi'tv! '. : . J . k. .1 .. "FBiiav, Bee 21, 17tf . 5 ; ''Revolted, Tliat the .Genora Auembly ot Virgiuin ,doth nnequivocally express a firm resolution to mniutain and defend the Constitution of tbe United States, and tbe Consti. tutioo of this State, against every agrjreeslon either foreign or domestic; and that they will luppoifc tut) uurnruujviifc vi uuiicu iDio-e i , - . i ..... . r , u , T'..;i...i L' , i . . . in all measures warranted by tne lormcr. ' "That (bit Assembly most solemnly decmrcs a warm attachment to the Union of tbe States, to maintaiu which It pledges lt powers; and, that for thit end. It m thetr duty to waten ovey, and oppose every infraction of thow principles which constitute tbe only basis nf that Uuion, because a faithful observance of them cau alone icure its existence and tbe public bup- piuess. . ' ' !' i "That this Assembly doth explicitly and precmptorily declurn, that it views the powers of the Federal GovTiiment, a resulting from the compnet to whictrthe States are parties, as limited by the plain suns'! ndduttition 9 ; Terms' of -A-Ivc: tii One square of 10 tines, One Insertion,..-Qrtpsuara S tnoiit!,.',..!. ;r I .; - Ona (quart 1 yuar;,, .... - ... . Two i.lsi 1 leot.t'i,... ... . . .. t . Twoaqiiare..! jfsr.:. ........ Si Column 8 months, ...... .-, . v , . i Column t ysar,...,., Column S moulllii,. Jt Column 1 JiMr,. tl 00-4 ' ttCr' 04' rroo" n oo so eo . it oa ' bO 00 80 00 00 M ' Column 3 months, 1 Column 1 year Bilnenid,'wUi''ibdliif'i llwa P" Kotlakala local Hilmon, flints anlos to oenW, ovog Ivh llrrte, tea oecjla pi ll. ' .' i ' L: AdmlnlstrkXitii,' tend, attachment, .divorce, and tr.nl Isnt aflTertlsements riin-t k"rfisid for lifnre inserlioa tbe iuslmmont crtrrstittttitig that toropeiritns no further valid than they ure aulhonwd by tho grouts enunipjatcd ia that compact; find that iu case of a'tlellborate, palpablo, and dia-' .gcrout Exercise' of Other powers, pot granted' by the said compact, tntr ftiaioj, vno are ixgre' tiet thereto, have the right and aro in duty boupd, to iutcnwiw, fot arostaig :tho progress' of the evil, and for muiutuiuiiig within their respective limits the aulhoriti., rights,, ani liberties nppirtaiiihig to them. J - - ' 'That the General .Assembly dolh nls'o'tfx-nr itjrdwirirpnet.'tkhta atiit'it hfta,-jii-sun. dry iiittsllfes, bf oa manifested by he Fiuleral1 Govartiineut, to. enlarge its poeiB by. jToreod constructions -of the eonstinitioaol charter, whifch defines tlfcm;tnd, tbatituJicatinus have' appeared of a design to expound certain geni-erui phrases (which, having been copied from' the very limited grant of poworrJ in the furrher' Artinlea nfGonfcderation. were tho lens liabla Lt be miconstnieil)noe8 to destroy, tha men n iug nnd eilect oi tue particular ruuiiictnuuui Which necessarily explains, e,ad limits the genf efal'phreses, and goas id consolidate the fctdte' by degrees into owe sovereignty, the obviour tendency and inevitable remit qf,which wogld be, to transform the present reptiblitian system of the United States into an absolute, or aV best, 0 mixed nioriarcKy. ;.l i ' ,7 Y. :;.,, "That tbe General Assembly dotli particul' larly protest against the palpubla and alarm-iug infraction! of tbd Con$titH,tiqn,o'tb two, lute cases of the 'Alien ?tid 'SeditiorJ' Aots,! passed at tho last session. of Congr; tho firs of which exorcises a p&wer uowher dlf-Eated; to tha Federal .Government, and which, by uniting legislative a,ud judicial powers to thosa-of executive, eabverls tb geijcful priuciiplet: of Iree government, as well at the particulac organization and positive provisions of. tha' Federal Constitutionjttnd the dther of which act exercises, in. like manner, a power apt dalogatod by tbe 'Conitiiutoin fcat oq tha contrary, expressly and positively forbidden by one of the ameudmouU thereto; a powsr which,, more than auv other. onebt.tO: produce uni versal alarm, because ifls 'levelled against tho: right of freely examining public;haracier4 and,1 measures, aud of free communication among the people-tlicroo'ri: which hns-vtr been justly, deemed lie only.feflectunl ghtirdinn! of every other right. .... "That this State having by, its Convention,,- which ratified the iFederal. Constitution, expressly declared, tliat' among ' other essentiali rights, the liberty of conscience and tho press caunot be cnncojled,' abridged, restrained, or-modified by any authority ofthe jttit4 States aud from its extreme anxiety , to guard' these. riShtB frr;eory ;p03siible.attacki of sophistry and ambition, having with otbor Stutes recommended anlmoDdrawit for that purpose, which, amendment was, I in nne time( anueed- to the' Constitution, it would mark a reproachful in-consistency;1 and-criminal degeneracy, if anj indifference; irir4 pow thownto tho most palpablo violation of one of tha rights, thnt dc-clured and socnred"fand to thar wbfisltTirent of a precedent which may be futal to the oth- i ..... , 1 . . . i . . "That the good people of this cpmmu wealth, having ever felt, and eotiutuog' t feel the most sincere affection for their broth!-ren of the other States',' the truest anxiety for establishing and perpetuating the Union of nf; and tbe most scrupulous fidelity to thnt Constitution' which it the pledge of tnoiual friend ship, and the instrument 01 mutual nappwets, thB General Atsombly doth, solemnly , appeal! to the like dispositions in the other States, ia confidence that they "will concur with' this commonwealth, In declaring, as it does hereby declare, that h acts aforesaid ate aaconititu-tionalfand, that the rtecassnry and, proper measures will bo taken by each for co-operating with this State, in maintaining noimpaired the authoritias,. tights,, awl liberties,. reMryed. tq the States, respectively, or fo the people, vTbat the Goverhor bo desired to transmit a copy of tbe foregoing resolution i tbe ey-ecntivo authority of each of tbe other, ,tutes, with a request that the same ma be comifiu-nicated to tbe Leglolature Thereof od that t copy be furnished t each of the ScnotOrndl Representatives re presenting this State m Ihe' Coup-reBS of tho Uuited States " ' " . '-"Attest1 .-'...WOIIN STEWART. ,f "1798, Decembor 24th, Agreed to by tha Senate. lLBROOXK, "A trnecopy from.ffie original, deposited' in the office of the Goieral Assembly. Jt)HN STEWART. :' "' Keper of Roll.' A lew word's of comment Oti' th ab6Vo.A4 '' These resolutions were sent to tha "sovt'rat , States,' and were dcrfounced by' ever enVrtf-cept Kentucky, as nubvcrsivebf thergoWrn-' ment "They have never, bec 'pttdorsed:' by them.' On tbe contrary ttey wew expressly pnftWft8'two;.'M4 total,.' to the Very idea ot ' government' ', To permit each State' to aeoicje for Kself what laws were'- eonsUti-f tioiial,.onlto act' upoVitoWuv decision; wis so manifestly absurd, ftrd ruinous, ai to Meet' with almost uulversal reprobationV And evert the authors, Jefferson', and Madison,- 'few-, yours atlcr, attempted tO'e'xrlair'tlielM'ftWuy' but failed to repudiate them as thoy should-. ; Look at the language.' Tb;' SrATsi b'o are yarties thereto, hive (he "rkiiit, aodare'tir duty bound, to interpose, ! Wbat'mfcro ah-' thority did South Carolina want than this', to iustify her rebellion. ' She thought the tariu uncoiisritationai,- ana proposa iu rc.nv, -u. Gen, Jackson threatened to hang CalhomV. 'if he attoinpted it,' and secession wat then eroA-ed. Sho, thought the ' restriction of SJayory nncoBstittttwnal, af4 tie tweeded wodct that, traitorous imbecilerKuehaoaa, and then fire nnon Fort Sumtot. "We know the rest. They justified their treason by the Yirgiuia rescrlf- . .. X "nt "A.1 ! lions of 1798. Tho Democracy ot un i I8CK, endorse r'ncl approve these same retonV tions. They'thus justify Bcsiuoa'ati4 sort. We repeat, wo denounce the Virginia relations as false, und destwetiro. ' We hold that the Snprcnio Court of the Uuited' States,' ai , not each State, must determine: whether' laws are constitutiohaT. ' 1"-";'' ' i i - " tV.lI-l '' . fit ' 'r Dietoricl, the'groat statistical aotfeorUj in Korope, eetihmtes th' pnpujatioo of tho world at 1,300,000,000, ct( whom twenty-6vt por cent, are Chrktiat. Half of th latter. 163,500,000,- art Raman t'at'aolica. Accord-tni'to a census orthw tontmrmicants of that church taken in Rome in 1865, by cr tha wafers conmimed at Easter, cl tu-'t . throushoot the world, tho nmah.-r ci rouuicants was found to bo but 4.0,:.;i" ' ' ":!Irp3ci;sr,"f!'vi tl o Ir u..-ii i:'" the' honiasrl which ' V lc' tv a. to Witncpn th -Woodwards ! H. Reeds of rinsy!v.mia V ticknt with C iloiu'l ir, fin (hi Vallnuilij.-hi'.i'ii Mid I'1 jinli'o th"ir ci'-.i t-r )i- " t anything tj'aortof 1" v;

MiiiiBwwaiiaiiaaiaiair''"M,'MMMM'''www','1'IM,l,',,Mim III. MI 3 ft' tl 1, f: .V .V 41 A X : 1 I raw. r 7 f i VI V. r f Hi V&hoii1 'Eopublican; A rAHU.Y WKWSPAPKR. , ,r. i ' t ' . .-v I )!. M WV. T0. V.MJ ADVANCE J o VM, TvJJASCQM. oriiiToa, rtiataiia a irMtoa, i i- ... i- . J . i rricc in tiucvtrN block, no. , iu stort. V' i All kinds dona yrnarf , ha inferior stria, W b paid . fcr on d.llve ry. 8. M. ft H, Tl. R.-C1UN0B 0? T1MB. : The Winter arrangement on the I. II. k N, B R. hM vtiura lld, and tha tinsel for, leaving Vt, Vernon are M . Allows; ' i ,, (n' , ! '. t. ...... t Txtisi ooixo aoovc . .; Jcuoramnuattoa learea...... 4:0 av M, ipnn 10:11 r. a. nun aoio itohti. ""' 4M leavee -. .....1:40 T. M, , Accommodation- reaTea 7:41 A ah Isprcs. leave,. ....-i...-.-.. -.... ..7:08 A. at. f-T C.f (jn Uil .Ctirttal Ohio rjoad teavf yVewri aa follows; i I'.1.: if) i t ) J : .4:30 r. . ...12:00 M. ....2:12 1. x. Oxtiie P. 0. k 0. fd going Ept, th ri lvo , - '-..i ..1,4..:. AlKoo J . AaU tt'it, Jao oothi CitM' lV9:'t Jejr Ityr n ftlioro. CHUB.C1T MiECTOKy'J At'Pl'' TmWff. ritTV'- my.vr. Trtief n e.t . McKnli, RrTice Trr KabhilK lit H n clork A, K.ii1 Jl o'clock P. M. Snbbntli Schnol t 'oVrH:k ,-A. h. S;i ,: vS- ki.ik b. MorKrr. . iVANORUCAI,. MTTIlRltAV rnrKcn. .. . ( Slnet RfT. J. r. rW.ARErT. Pamir. MESBTTERIAN Cfll'RCir, oornr f!r and riict. ttrt ..... . HKRVEIT. i BETH(msT EprscoPAr. ciirnrni !! nr and 'heathnt atVteta. Roy. K. II. Dl'.JH. PROTERT.tSf EPISCOPAL ClIHRCn. rorner Oajr nil High trtt, Rpt GEO. B. REESB CATnoKJlB CTTORen.-feorniT Hlrh- awt Mrlfn', , -jj R,. JUMPS BRF.ST BETHOMST PRnTESTAIfT cni'RCH. Muhanlra atrtetjbctireott Vlnf and rtf'K. . . BAPTIST CHI'RCir, Tlnatropt. W'n MnlH'rrr and Mcbanica Rpt. .T. W. IC1f RARUER. eONHREOATIOKAI. CIU'BCIT. Mtilliirrr t.. tMtwr-n Sngvand Hmtramlc. ReT T. E. MONROE. SITED PREBVTERIAX. fnrm'r Mnln and fiiTtar atraeU. . . . Kn, H. M. HHTCHWOK. llRTHOOtsT -WESLKVAH ClirnCrT. ri.f 11,1. . lwrrand Wnwto-w j i ,1T' T, TR. TR.irN. KRsMLIlf BUSINESS CARD. KCILX. 5o.lvIIX.Iii3, , JVhuleaal auJ RctMl Pfalert in 300TS & SHORES, ' " l.rUTiiea, Kit xn FIxaiNoa, - S. T.1 T-A-XiOIt, 5o CO. 1' V 1 t P ' I- JL "V- -I firy fiomls and IVolians, ,. - .iJ., , t PAY CASH FOR ' .. BUTTER, EGG3, RAGS, &C. i ATTORNEY ,, ., , JtNt) c6VXSE,hUOn AT Id'?, DUNN & SNOW ; . ir tmittitisftl . . PAOTINO, GRAINING V Miss JL A. DONNELLT, Ml Vr-nnn, March 21. ISiWy! : CEO. W. MORGAN, . Aitoruoy ut Lnw, , ." OFFICE Ovfr th Shoe Stnrf of MllUr WWto,. JIOCNT VERNON, OHIO '. ' Krnvh Jtaf. lMS-ly ' -MATICH 9th, 1864. ' WARNER MILLER, . ... .... , M HKL'EIVIN'a FRESH NEW GOODS - Pur hi'l n'tiro Ort Pfctiiio lo Pilrr. AH M Zh li, iZ. . '!... ITAU.N'KR.Hll.I.ER'fl. ; MfLLIWERY. Hit k. .Tohusoii, , llVf rnWer iwoT 2il HW oo) iiiViHnw. A RS pre' oied to do Work In thenm.l approved tyle. either In traw, Silk, or Crape. They keep a good a.irtment of Ribbons and other Trimins. Mar Wn ; . 1 4 j ,U t.iii 1 : ' i OrvLvRi! BROWN, z r4mUthiolMiyiei;lati, OFFICE-Woodward Building, ll.tln Street, Jfaln, nMj, 7 n v ' V IT. t'EWON, 0, amsricaTj house; i. H0S3 HAMLIN it CO. PRopRttnonii. ao mu.1, x. ) .. NEWAItK, OHIO. L. ian!la i, V tiaanAS, (June 20, lll8S-ly ) 3YALTER; L: SIMONS, '"'"ATTV at LAW. A ND X 0 fA It Y lTJi L I C, , ' OFFICK-Ove'r John ticnnfy's Clothing Slptf ) ' M iln street. Kill write fe,l;, Settle F.', oll(,c, nic ano at .ted to hi. and attend prompt ?iiy 19 una 20. lUKA-lr. : r). .-WLn -f- , 0VII!1IPTI0H TVINCHKSTER'8 OENUtNC HY ; POI'llOSWilTfS (Ibe only reliable enrm of lr archill'a' nWdj. ha attained a leputnllon in the e of Coosumytloo, nunaralleled In the annuls nf cdlclne." As a oetvons tonic, the llynophophit-a ' Paioaa; In T and If) ex. bottles, II 00 and 12 gaeb. 6 small or ir lar area botUe. for U, ky eanreaa. a drt;giau, and at the Mie'geae- lod r.tnll kv Hold ) by all rear espei eubli fU dspot, woolowileaftil r, mil tie i. WIWCHKSTKR. Mioha 84. N. Y. -i '(' hrr,sry14, UHtVly. i . ;??:;::i.APIKS..:: V' , ,'.'..,. Call fo ;of .-.( cDR ESS GQOO.S. : - , AT . ! -. i -. i . y -t , . . ,,-.,..,..... ,t :V: 7itrncr Xlillers, : ; 1 ' " ' " Ps has the Cheapest (Tow. ' y, t Feb. ji; Jrsr!l tnROJ'filirWA.rT 'enrad tf Nervoaa ' p.tillltr, V. PrnsturT OiifAf ard the erfe It nt rmtbfil la to fnro iUtr will, th kn"4att of cum, ( v ' I charge. ) Tim reiff'i it HsnA- r, rtd rl"t 1 for foil paj'jiAr, bj "r' j- PB Ire sqperlorto anithint; horetnlftro , wniie r f".ee.of general deVilHv, lneenf alrrngih, ih and ap. elite, dvupepela. nfAitSlglV, parilr.la. ehmnle brim, hitiw a.'thma, axrofala'ft Is'the nint efflcaclona tn at-' pient known. A fair trial ia a certalo cure. (Clrenlars tree. I VOL, XI. . ..... DOUBLE TRACK HOtVTE. , .':. :( , .... nut t :' v ' , 1 i. . ' PITTSBUEGH TO PHILADELPHIA From Jtll portion" of the U'cat, Norlh-Waat an4 tiouth-VToat, tbia Una and 1la connurtiona form aitbar tha aborteat or tho beat route to Pbiladel. pbia. New York, Boaton, Battlnior. and Wanbinglua.- The traveller may with conflilruce rely upon nure ena nncttoa. high apeedwith perfeet aafety, and rvery an-fifiniKe Tor comfort that cun bo briicured. New and elegant paaiienger cara, for day ana night service, baro reeDtly been added to the cuulnnteut vf the. Ftnuayl rania Central Rail Ri.n.l. At I'lttnburgh, trkina frowi the Wert ran direct to fho riilnn Depot, where panaenger are trariferred to ttia Trai a of tha Pennevlvaoia Central Railway, which ;vave I'ittabitrgh and arrive at other point, a follow.; . MAY KXPKESfll-Leavea Titteburgb at 2.50 A M.. elO'p(ne at Principal Station..' Arrives at AltoonaO r.60 M.t Tyrone 44 A. N. (U.llefoote 10 32 A. H Lock Haven 12.00 P. II.,) Ilarrleburgt at 1.10 P. ll.Klmnretatt.4KP. H., New York, via All.ntown, at 10 20 P SI., Philadelphia aU&P, If., and New Yolk, via Philadelphia., at W.ST . M. ' ;.1 ' " M A IL. LIME.LraTea Flit.h'nrg at' t So A. V., topping at all regular Stationa. - Altoonat at 11 46 A. M , liirrl-blir Oil P. M., arriving at Philadelphia at . Il.aoi', JI,, and Nev York, via ?liiUJtl,i,)et joe lTTSnVRn AND F.KIK &AtU i Eeate. Pittahargh (at 1.S0 P. H. Slopping at nearlr ail Station . Arilrea at Altoonat at T.20 P. M Qariia-burg LaSrA, . anil Pkiiadelptiia at 40A. H. 1'IIILADFI.PIIIA KXPUESSVU,, PUUbnrghal4.Vtr.il. .Kipping only at Princiial Sta-tioiin. Arrive at hAtmUt A 10 P. M , Altoona at H U P. II . Harri.burgaf 2 it A.M. Raltimore T.00 A U., New York, via Allentown. 10.00 A. U.. Philadelphia at 7.0.1 A. M., and New Torkt 'a Philadelphia, la. 00 M. Slrrpivg Cart run through on t bin train from Pittsburgh to Baltimore aod Philadelphia, aa1 to ew York via Allintown r . r - FAST I.INK-rT. Pltt.hnrgh at'a.30 P. If. Stopping only at principal Stationa Arrive, at Altoona Ht2 3'l.t. II.. Hnrpiubnrg' at7.iW A. M., Baltimorof at 12 20 P. M., Ne Ynrk.f via Alli ntown, at 2.4S P. M., Philadeiphiat. 12 60P.U and New Yorkt via Philadelphia, at 8.42 P. M. final font. t Dinner. ; t f upper. 4Vtr,i7y. all nthe r traivt Suvdnyi txnptei. : TICKETS F'lff Af.E TO BOSTON BY BOAT OX RAIL. ' hiiat tii kkts ooon nsr a5t oF tok norxo li!. F.tt8 TO Ai.Ii P0IST8AS LOW A8 AKX ROriU. sriEBifra- cabs;, m 0?( XIOMT THAl.fH TO PI! t AD'A NEW YORK & BALTIMORE. B.1GG.4GE CHECKED THROUGH J)X!) rit.l.YsEEKHED FREE.' THE PK.N.XriVl.VAMA UAU. KOAD CO. i Will nut avuinr un rlk fr Hh:m(, except for Wear iiikf Apparel, anil Im. -it tbrii r "j(-iinibility to Ope llui. Ujtl ifi,)nrx in vn u AH U-vitiia excM-dimr ihni nn- iinllji viiliif, will W tit tb of tha fwottr, ault'M FB EIGHT. V By IW Rente Kreiulitiiiirivll Ut-i.criiit.n ran he -.fne- wanlL'il In ami f oin Pliiliiili..lii., .New York, Ronton ol Hallimtirc, tnanil friuii an.v'pi. nt on tii Raflroada of nbio. Kentucky. Iiiiliunn lllinoii, Wifcooein, Iowa oi Mi.iiniiri. tig Huitntatl tliitrt. 1 lie 1'ruiiv.Yliuiiiu (N-ntrnl 11.11 R"e! almi connect, at Pitteburgh wilb Slenniere. by n liii-b tiood. can be for wiirded l nny luvenuUlt- i.ori on ilie Ohio, Mii.kinguin, reunemie , Cnml'i-r'nn,!. Illiiioin .Ui.t.jMiippi, Mimtourl, rk.n.lKand Hi-il llivi: am: nl Cleveland, Simduiik mil t:iiiriico with isieaim-nt to nil ports on the North-Western Ijikee. I MerchanlN mnl .iHlpiH'r1 Mii3i.tiiig the transportation of tli.lr Fr,lli.i t-i tlnKi'tunyi?', cmi rely with confl-dence on itpce'li lr.ii..it. TIIK HA I'M OF FRKRH'IT In and fMin nny point' la the Weal,- hr the P.'linlvuiiiCentrnl Rail Kni.fl art al til liif 'it fntutiilr ii, nr- it. ui-d by other Itait Jivad t F pirlicnlar t,i (rvwh p ekgea yiA I'lli i ijktkai. K. H. rur Fri-ight Cntrart-or.Priipl'Ing Pfreellons, upplj tu oc adilresH either of the iulUiwljig Afco.Vi o(the Com-i'auy: S. R. K lf!?TO. Sr.. freight Agent. Phila.Ta. ' ' 0. A IfAttPKSTF.It. FrelOt Agent, Pitt.burgh CI.AISKK l.'ll . Trnn.ler A gent, Piltsbllrgh. II If. UIIIIWN k C . Cincinnati. Obln. R C. Ml .iRI'M Cp., Haillson. Indiana, i , .. MllltKHKAl! & CO.. r.iniivlll, Kentucky. . . M AIMVA V. Kvenr Mo. fad. H. F. HAS S ffk St. r.i.uih, Mlwooil I'l.AHKK . CO.. Chicago, tllinota, J. II. Mi Cl.l.M. (-iirtMiioiilh, 1). .1 i(. I.IIVK. lliivuvllle, Ky . , ll.tr.l At tl. UnHetta. O. ' i i K AYUKS. ln-k ngnni River. ti .. '. II ft K. 1. I.ANiU.EYrCalllpdli., 0. II. , PltRCKft fl. !4nnerilla, 0, . . J flf M lM!on.in. Hipeiy, u. . l .1K..UIUL1I , Oenoml Travelling Agent. LIVpfsTOCK. tii'i'fprV iurl Fat-tiiem will ftnH tliikt mnut kiWunt r t'txiK idnt'if frr f.U Hturk. ( pf Ifttifl Ynrds, well J wiitp nril Ptif itirfl with fviry eonvenfenff , hare iTimiiin in i"'. n inr-r wmii. rrrm narrinDurjf, wlicrr nlll h lonti.t rvi'i-v mnvptilpnce for fncllnif n1 rrnttMff. arhil-plnntT..n''.l of I'll I J.Al'Er.PHf A, NKW roKK n-i. MAri.MfHK WAItKKTH. ThlKwill )nob fAun'l trii ivinrht. ittilrht-ett (vnd iriniti direct rmitit for Slork to Kcv Yrfc frla Alhuroffril auU itl fewer cliatiirri ibnn tiv ntht't. fc.Vrt H I hH'l'',i:' rM Stiiirrin.fntli'nt. Altoona. Pa MK.VIIV tt'.-(lfl INKKH. Cfir'l Tlckat Ajrent, Pbila : H. II. HfU'Slt.lJcii tKreiht Agent, PhU, MOtmT VERNON i UNION BRASS BAND. riltt is IttMt i. now completely organised, and In 1 rood h-illihi- emiiiiiiin, H has a choice selection ol .Mu-ic an under competent instruction has arrived :it pr,.oici.iir in its muslcnl execution. Itiareadyto rill all calls fir rouslrH-Herviroii at home or abroail, on rvnaonable term, either for Cotillion lrtiea or for Brass Mn.ie. W, U. T.IOMPrOX, PlO.i'l. C. P. (InanoiiY. See'y .. S. 0. Rrr. Lender. (ftee. 10. lP64r. . Howard Association. . . .. : I PHILADELPHIA, PA. Dlneften of the Nenrotiu, r3onlnl,TJrlniiry and Sexual Syatema new and reliable treat ment in Jteporte f tho HOWARD ASSOIIIATION Sent by mail in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge. Adilreaa. Dr. J, SKMXEN H0UI1IITON. Howant Asao-elation. No. 2 S.uth Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Doe. th.1AMr. - - - - ' -...', KENYON HOUSE, turner of MuluSL and the Public Square, , MOUNT VEllNON, 0. HlVI.Vfl I.puvdthlu well known aoil popular Hotel, and fit ted It nu in Superior fltyle, I am prepared to aci'iun modal trtivelra anil all otheni wbo ma)- friTame calk Tbe paLnaniee Of the Piililie ii rttiiofictrully mt-HclM. ' JOSKPH SCAHUUOUVM, CANOEIUDOOTOR, ; ' ' 5 f ' ' Or CLEVKLAVD. W0T,D Inrnrmall wlio mnj be iflltcttd with Caacer that be is prepare.1, to cure yiat formldahle die tare by aprurcM tlitTerinir from all Jtberft known only tn hi miie If, liii treatment oonM'ta Id tha application asH(l nlwtf, eompoaed of Kurnpean hertm, eaaa 1 05 littls ar do Mia. lt aamiutftira be will ha able to say to the patient wbetl(;r tlieircaae ia curable or not and will guaranty aprnaeit ear of all be tin-iltiftakee. A1"- vtll joarrapta refmafiept cut Id tl WM caw q! Rh,nm.fn. . , RBrBRRxeie Mm. 601 ael Key, Qeo MaiU)ler, X R. Hum It, and t)avld More, Mt Vernon. 0.; John Uallj, Ccntrrbnrf, Knox Co., Ohio. irnoa-At his renidence, Bedford, Cnjahoga, Co., 0., J J lailea Souh of Qie-Tlami. ( 1 ;Jal , lnt$-f lr:itHYI,I-Cornt. Vartn. Uuntnon, "Hair or 1 V 'p1j 'rnm to c?ntl esroi Cancera of ptry rlety ru ml or no ebarr4 Feveriit Oholeraronr-hna. Acmte Khenmatlitni and Cholera In Ike citr tbe SaMeot being uadpr40 Teareofage-will not be charged nlt'M cared. (Syphilitic aid 0oaorhral Piieaaen per-mrnerttljr and cnnfldentially cared nr the money refund ed. All old Sore. ami Ulcere healed en. PriniteOonMillation frtm and tlrvtly confldenlial. A'WretM pot. $X bit. Vroon. O. Office on Tine H., M rtvl" Kait of Hevi tret. DR. J. H. UPFlCKft. Jane 37, IMt-ljr. , - A' iliff JTFLUXQ RE8T0RKDI IflNORANCB EXPOSED ' v fAI.i.lUkd UMIAMikU! . t. irhlr Ituaerteit to both eexee, married or ringle, lb braitb or diteeee. Da. Laot Parte, London, end NewYoebMBAical AdTtiar and Warritr Guide. Sutb edition 4tt P$i pearly 1X Anatomical Illoptratlona, upon Ueotal aud Nf rvooe Vility, Vrinary Depoeitr, lnroltwtaey ,n ef Beptew. Iropoteocy, ITectionii n the Bledlerand Kidney a, (.ttnitn Vriiiry diwa-ee, eel thlTefitPvtittncta, the anatrmiy ef the aexuai orrend of the mft'entfemalp-fe-1atfnt nrteerfbeeirt nhrtioloirr Ruropnn bwiTifiUl pracHce Wh'. their recipe ann r;cine tha Atnaarl eni"vlf, rar-a ami j.or d- 0 trT4tment, hi., Mailed reefr 1 1. (W, clonty teeltd. Alt -who would avoid naintceeefful and bacharnal treatment with Mrrury, Copevia, Injf ctont, Oautert-Mtlnen, Qiraek H peel He, Aatidotea. Inntnimenta, An, rhnnld Jtorrhaw thin Briirinal work of tbe pabiUher, 8 WAUNKH No. 1 Vflmey etreAt, pe American Hew K. 121 iStneaa St., er cminilt the Doctor. No, 17 Oredway. apetaire, New Yrvrt., from 10 k M. to A p. M "AVi riqur wUb other pApern ; recommendiBn Da, LARMdNTand hie work." 't.Mnr Mat 'mi, Otr tow tti It'f-.rMt tXtptfeh, Stantt ZitU&g. Atlas, Mt4 aJ Br-ij. if M7 . HrtMr. Aycr'3 Cathaitb filisi i 1 1- 1 .:i.l i :! ' 'i( MOUNT VEllNON, OHIO. TTTESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 18G5. r ,i For tho Rapubllean.) . !.-., , :'; t. ABitt icAat '-lii ) If in ooorso of your iravala yoi avor should eon To Braadoa, Just wiaka It a point . .tij ;.. To itay there a week, to visit tha lown, For 'twill nay yon without any doubt. .. i. ... 1 . - ' ; ). ' Wo one had a "tar.ro," but It's goiie br the board, For you know "Uncle Sam" thuughl It best To extract from its keeper a sb.fa of his hoard By way of a "Kcenn" at least.; . i . il Not being a frlebd to "Uncle Sam ", P'D Of clearing the country from deb'. Ho closed up his doors and took down his. alga, 1 So you o w'vo do tavern, M yet . , ,;,., ; , "i ...... , . ,. ' But ydult find generous hearts alt oter the town, " tVholll ho happy to tak4 you as guest . ' . 'iJ Kut your huslDmwtT conrie you'll espeot will be knowai For ova hra it, ad llls all the res,. , .( If in yoor travel yoor hoot sbodld giva-' way, Just cAll.oA JoIro Smith over there j .,7 (You'll Hud bin ft home, for bo 1 there night od ilfty I, He'llf it or make a ct pal,r. ' . J... ,., ... ::, - ; ... ,! j . , 'I- '!' . Oiparli.ns y may travel In a more wooVm way, , Aud your b.rRc hecume fractious anil run ; Your boggy "sniasheil op" and strewn by thf way, YuuiliArnesafureter umlvine j J ! : r. ':. Rhn right Into Ike Colemsn's right then on (he direct, But stopI guess ho's not there ; ' "i ' But If you can And him he'll fli It complete, , ii Just aa well as thy do anywhere. , r. ' If the tire should want setting, or blacksmlthing done, 'Motetter"ls always on hand, , His "shop"' is down street just a llttlo beyond, . k Us always does work that will stand, , ,f your harness it ripped In various w.vn, .1 No oialtfr how bad it may be, , 1 ; ; . Just carry It over to Yaasy Hays, t j-Holl Ax It M "sMfal a Bea," : ' I. .1 ; ; "; ! We bare also two stores and a PnstpATce, too, , Which you'llvlait of course while you stay, , And if nim'm" cant soil you goods, that will du, Why "Jesse's" Just over tho way, I 7 I '. " .1 . .' I And If Jesse'J not in. his aon-in-law Don , Will attend to your wants right away For he tnakoa it a point to be always on bund, ' Hi) matter what Hod of a day. , .; ' ' 1 We bare 'wo splendid churched and icbuol-h,ui,5e to ' toot, ' ' - ' Where we rfot ill thf knowledge we can ; , Our preachers are Hucb I know they will ivit, j And our icbnnl can't he beat in the land. ' ,i , v. .i ... : ,. .. 1 r . J ; That mill which jou cec thin iltlc of the trenra ', In ownvd by the 'ductftt" ;nd QUIie " " ',. f The machinery i aew and in propelled hy atoam.. ua 11 Biakei u;uitf a help to the place. ' ' A Botanic the doctor was odcc, but It weme Tliat h(t did'iHltke erl 8 and root pilli, 80 he Ariel a new plan (which n ThomrnnnV) of ntcptii, ud bcoM ion ! U powef makes (te mill. , . Rut hark f whjr the clock U juit striking two' re, And f must retire for the night ; ' ' ' " " So I bid you gond-hye, boning next wLen we meet 1 all all be In a mnch bet tec PllgU1' JtBAMiox, Aiifiust 29, 1865. total Jtovt(.A ' A Slight Mistake. : 11AYK TIIIN09 EXPRKSSI.Y UNOKKSTOoY). .1 bad niDiJo up my mind to it, mid when once niy mind is made op it was as good as dotio. Thnt's what I thought th d, but since then, I've changed opiniou somewhat, aud have ncknowledgfd myself a firm-believer in the old guying. "1 here's ninny slip"&c.; &c, and the homely but truthful1 reuiurk of my old Auut Eunice, who nlwuys checked me iu my pfojitiVo assertions with "Tut, tut, child; it's the ensieHt thing in the world to be mistaken j we are uqtcftre of anything, my dear, unless we have swallowed it, and can neither get it up nor dowai-' " 1 Jt was a spleuOid morning just such a morning as 1 love above all others a delr-cious, cool bracing air,, and a bright sun coming from the trees in the' road, ranking th frost glisten like thousands of diamonds, and giving promise of a comfortably warm dojj in place of those sultry, hot, siefcenipg' ones which August bid brought us. A, 'glance from my chamber window out across tbe shining river to the fields beyond made me tire of everything in doors, and determined ine to have half a holiday, so .1 set my wits to work to devise avplun for having au nfternoou overflowing with enjoyment - la the first place yon nmst know we had a sister living iu the country, about two miles from towu. with whom llame Nature is always so bountiful.' I knew all around and above that long walk to the orchard hung groat clusters of luscious, purple grapes, an 1 iu the orchard the trees were laden with the choicest apples, while on the ground the great hellflowern, pipping, toppy bawkins, maiden blushes ana raaibos. lay in confused and tempting heaps, ,1'hcn the pear tree and melon patch were there, and everything else that is nice aud good. Yes, sir ; 1 was going to rusticate and revive my drooping spirits under my sister's 'vine aud fig tree,' (apple tree rntjier,) that very afternoou. That settled, set ahout my studies with unusual vigor, and had dinner on the table u half hour before Harry's plug bad turned the corner ind hove in sight. - ' When we were comfortably seated I broke tbp siltnee by faying in the meekest manner imaginable : .... .. - Mlnrry, I should' like to have some apples for baking to morrow." ' . ' "Very well, I will send some around this afternoon." ; ... ' This was very kind, but I was not satisfied. "Harry, are you going to b very busy this aftornocn t" ' "Not partioiilarly, why V . ' ' "Oh, nothing, only 1 thought if yon could get wagou aud go to Eva's it would be just a pleosaut little drive, and you kuow that their ripples are much better than any we can bay ; besides 1 am sore Clara would love dearly to go, then you knew you coild bring something for father, just as well as not, and. he has no time to go fot theia." : He looked pleased ; I was 00 tbe ' right track, to I kept on so diligently that when, ha banded bis cap for the third cup o coffee, be said ) . i ; : , .-: i '. . : K,.r Well, I will soe ifJ can get a Tagon." 'Epppose you go down first and eee if Clan cun go," 1 said, as he finished, aud away be weut, whistling-, wbila V began setting tilings to right, and mnklng preparations to start. He Was back iu a twiukling.. " .--' 'Clara would like to go. tho snys, but Liz-r.io Dean is there to spend' the day, aid. she cannot leave her.",.-.. - . '...'.' ' ""Then tnke her along. I am sure she would enjoy it The more the merrier, you know," I said, growing rnot wonderfully benevolent at the contemplation, of the pleasure in prospective, '" ' i s ', : '" i'.' "Very well," unil ha wan gon? for the wog. on. , My diligent morning' work bail left me nothing to do. so tliuc by . the time I saw Hurry coming with the wacon I was ready and witltlng. II drove past like a Dash." I watched him until I euw him drive up to futhor'egatfl, , help tho two tlolijhtcd girls in pud turn, then I stepped buck to put ou my hat and clouk. I did not think it necessary to go to the door till be drovo np, so I stood very complacently looking around at my pleasaut sitting-room, aud congratulated myself oa having everything done up 10 -nicely, and being so reiidy to go, inbre completely ready tlutu since I bud been hoosekcepinii Must tbeu a wagou passed, und running to th door a was just in tune 10 near a gay laugh which enme fiuuting buck from the girls a whiz and whirr of the wagon wheels, und they were round the corner and out of sight.-' : I could scarcely rjelieve my eyes, so I gave) them a vigorous rub, looked down' thou np the rosd, but it was too true,-th'iy wore out of sight , , i,., . ! 1 turned and crave the door a push which closed it with a bung, and made things rattle again ; then I gave an- impatient stamp, end two Umrs rolled down either cheek. 1 could not help it ; it was su.ch a disappointment alter so many pleasant anticipations, then I commenced wulkiug the Hoor "very calmly through a. great storw Of crushed expectations, aud frustrated pluns went whirling through rov bruin. ; Tbe momeut 1 saw thcr were rcully irone, uud I was left aloue, I remem bored distinctly thut iu alt my conversation bad never suid one ward about going mysef, und I could not roally blame Harry very much, though sijeutly culled dolt, stupid uud several other not very afiectiouato numoa which I wold v,o baye allowed, any one else 10 say lor worm My first impuhe was to wulk after them ; the next was to sit down quietly and go o with my knitting as though nothing Imil unopened, but thut would not do it would make mutters worse. So I started out aud wulked as thouirh ou a race, nntil great beads of Dertmiratiou stood ou my lureueail, and 1 was panting for breath. . 1 culled at my aunt's ut tho other end of town, but could not say a word of disuppoiutmcnt, for my lips quivered t tho thought of it. I went to tbe Tost Office, aud was ready to veut my anjer ou the P. M . because he lil . pot givo me a letter, thouifh I was uot expecting one. At Inst tired out with my exertions to get rid ofmyself,-1 wended my way homeward, and threw myself on the sof, went to sleep aud dreamed that the po.ir horse pud wagon had been turned to un uir bulloon, and that Marry and the girls had gone in it to Utah to join tho Latter Day tmt while I wag buried in one great betjp of melons, pears, and peaches, from which 1 could not extricate myself, uud I was cjjokiirg to death on cider-which sister Eva ai d her husband were compclliusine to swal low. My trouble was so great that' I awoke with a start, and seuted myself at the window. The suu was just going down to rest ; you all have seen the beautiful clouds of crimson and gold, the fiery bine and wbito, all so richly intermingled, tnal wiuie yon guzo yon cannot help wondering if Heaven can be morebeautiful.'- I sat silently contemplating all this beauty, und thinking how 1 could have en joyed the ride iu the country, when round the corner came tbe rcspectuble trio who were uppermost in my mind, seemingly in tbe best of spirits (and why should tboy not be?) They drove gaily np to tns rroni aoor, ana my uu conscious husband hsudnd out a sack of beautiful apples with the self eatisQetl air of one who bad done tbe cleverest thing imaginable, . , 1 greeted him with, "you (ire a nice young man," in a tone that startled him and made him turn upon me with eyes lull or inquiry, "What's the matter now f" . "That was a splendid trick iu you, to drive off in that kind of style and leave me standing with my h it on, waiting for you, wasn tit? ' He looked bland. Tbe girls both exclaimed: Why Nettie did yon iutend to go ? .They asked why you did not come, and Harry told them you were too .busy." ;. "Upon what authority, sir, um you make that excuse for me t" - "Why, indeed. I don t kuow : I thought you said so ; and I am Quito sure you did not guy you intended going.' .. . . . . . Ho was astonished at his mistake, aud drawled out his words like 6 penitent school boy;' ' ' 1 - "Vou must have thought me a model of disinterested affection to plan a whole forenoon for the 8uko ol fiudiog an excuse fur sending you off to the country to spend tho afternoon with two young ladies, wbilo I was at borne at work." I scolded till I bad to stoop for wont of breath. Harry was eilonl and went to tne wagon ana nrugut me a basket Of eood things which sister Eva had cent, and presented them with the sir of one who was making a ponce-ouenng.' ., Then wo all laughed : but to do them jus tice. I must say that they did not seem ta enjoy it more than myself, and that was very little, aiy disappointment 'was 10c severe. The grapes nnd pears were very sour to my taste and 1 inuciea tne npptes uiu uui cook good. 1 1 bavo made a great many visits to the coiiutry since, though none of them have ever made reparation for that disappointment aud 1 buve always thought that my health was not quite so good as it would have becu had it not been for that stupid mistake which my careless, good-heartoi husbuud made. , .j A Word lor Newspapers. .. AVe clip the following article from n ex change. It is true, and we commeud it to every man who has an interest, in the place wnere ne rtsiueg. xuimug it muni vuhiujuu than to bear people talk of what they pay newspapers for advertising, &.O., as so much given in charity : "Nowspapergj liy enhancing the value of property m their neighbor hood aud giving tne localities w wntcn ipey are nubliubed a reparation, abroad, benefit all such grumblers, particularly if tboy are mer chants or real estate ., owuers, tarice iub amount of the meagre su,m they pay for their support . jesidesv every public- spirited citi ten. has ft lnidablo pride in haxing a paper of which he ia not ashameoj, even though be should pick it up in New York or Washington A 8 lookiag thriving sheet helps to sell "property, gives character to tb hofnlity (UigVlfl M U respects ou dfakalile public convenience, ( Don) any caas the matter (a the local or editorial tolnmus should not be) quit up to your standard, do not east it aside aud pronounce it of no account, nntil von are satisfied that there has- been no more labo beatowed npon it than is paid fdr. )f yo want ft good readable shoot, it paust be supported;'. And it ntust noi be supported, in a snirit of charity either, but because vou feel aheccssity to support it. The local press is tue "power tuai tnoTes win people.-.;- 1 i , mm n 1 . Two bard things, first, to talk of yourtclf without being vain ) second, to talk of others without slaoder. ....... . " The1 "Morgao who was nominated hy the Confederates ladt week, was not the Morgan who escaped through a 'gnp in the Ohio Fcnitentinxy, but the one who escaped through tbe "gap", of the Comberlanoi Mountains. , - . ' '" " "" . Tbe Soldicn all for tue I'nlon ! ' ' (' ' Knox Cawxtv, 0, 8opt, 18C5. :Mrt. Editor : I would like, through tfio columns of .yont paper, to publish a fow thoughts that may be fintereat to your read ers. I hero are many good Union men woo are doubtful as to which party the soldiers will assooiato themselves with. And men on the other hand, the "Confederate Democracy" boast that the soldiers will vote with them. My acquaintance in the army isfnojtvery limited, fur I have the honor of having been a member-ot a good regiment for nearly four years, and I an? glut to any that 1 kuow nono of that class of soldiers among my associates that will vote with the party thut bns opposed tho Union and the Union party. Tbete will bo one class Of men that belonged to the am once, hut in thu hour of danger that tries the norves of brave men, when -all hands were needed nt their costs, they were cot there ; they had listoned to the treasonable advics of . , ... J J ,,. tne laiso Democracy, ana ueserieu tueir com. radus in nrms- they will vote now with-tbe-purty they acted with during the war.-They nave made a mean nnd. disgraceful bargain, aud we would not adviso theni -to break it now. 1 They have' tukon to the left uud the true soWier will go to tbe right, with the Union party. , , "VVliy, I ask do they expect us to vote with thea now? Is it became we bavt closed the war. successfully withtut any of their aid? Is it because that rhile we we fighting down tbe rebellion they were buoying it up that wbilo we were crushing the hopes of the rebels they were trying to sustain them, inspiring our fo.es with false, expectations, urging them on to new cruelties, end deeper, darker trimet of trensou and infamy ? Is it because they met in Chicago ip convention assembled in 18(14, and there unanimously dcclarod "the War a Inilure (" while we were then far duiWO iu Dixie, strikiug the blows iq the very heart of Secestiia, at a fearful sacrifice of human life, but with a devotion and energy that knew no such word as fuil ; that so soon afterward made "Jlllanla owt and fairly won" that made tbe rebellion begin to experience its death agonies, and the hearts of our foes both Noith and South beat fainter and weaker than ever before ? For all these man-; Testations towards us, what shall we soldiers render unto them ? Seven, thirties without taxation, or shall we put on the tariff as they desire ? ; '. Ob false Denocracyl foster : not your blighted hopes with the vain thought and useless expectation that a patriotic uud devo ted .soldiery will uuite their suffrage with yours, for it will only lead to disaster and defeat as ignomiulAus as your crimes of treason in the.past have noen neinous and lutamous, Arroy yourselves beneath your boasted banners of the Jf'r fimr Democracy, with your favorite inscriptions, "Free press' and freo speech r suspension or tne writ oi hqbcQt torput " ''No more Drafts P "Bcsis- . .... ' I" - I" X-.. uince 10 COIiScnptiuq i -iut u wuu uur a dollar to curry on the war," 4c ; then call for "the exile" that, "watched over the border ;" then, to the tnne 'there comet a poor exile" withdraw from the civilized world ; assemble iu Holmes county, kneel with your mouths in the dust and cry "uucleun, unclean" for the next four years to come. Ami then, after all these repeutunt FulTnrings and humiliation- return uud uslt tbe Union soldier if he cannot forgot and forgive f And you shall hear the welcomo reply of "Ir award breth re, go in peace ; we caunot go with you ; if yon are uungry we- win give you moai ; you are thirsty we will give you drink if you ask us to go a mile we will go with you two but vote with you we never can : "Vktkran. . Our National Debt . '. The United States are burdened with greai Public Debt, Iu aggregate, when al outstanding liabilities are fairly adjusted, will not fall below Three Thousand Millions of Dollars. Thq returned value of Keal and Personal Estate throughout the Union was, by the Census of I860, Sixteeu Thousand Millions of Dollnta, which we double to obtain tho actual value; aud this has not been essontially reduced; for, while the value of negroes as slaves has been struck out of existence, tbe real yalao of South-err) lands bat bbeo . increased thereby to at least en equal amount, and, while we buve been - t ,. . . ! .I. U ,1. I wasting ana ouruiug in tue ouuiu, wo nave been creating and improving in other sections, but especially in Colorado, Nevada, Montana and Iduho, where property worth Hundreds of Millions bos beeu developed since 1859. Ou the whole, we judge our aggregate Wealth to be just about Thirty Thousand Millions, so thut the Nutioual Debt is a general mortgage of about teu per ceut cu the cutire property of the country. : - - ;.' This Debt every impeniteut- Rebel, every maliirnant Copperhead, intensely hate, regard ing it as the cause aud means of their mutual overthrow. Had tbe Government boen unable to borrow,- the Rebellion could not have beeu put down; the Confederacy would ore this have been a fixed factr and by this time, the Demo cratic party iu every Free State would hare been fiercely struggling iota rccuusiructiou by the accession of their States respectively to that Confederacy. For it is idle to talk of Disunion save as a stop-gap a half way-house & transitory halt on a down-bill road, ' Not six mouths after the recognition of the Con federacy, every State reomiuiug in the Union would save , beeu convuisea oy a struggle caused by "the Demccracy" demanding that it adopt the Montgomery Constitution, make Slavery universal and eternal, and thus win admission into, the empire of Jeff. Davis Horatio Soymour vjauted New York to , do this in 18(11 ; Rouan M. Price publicly urged I. r .1- t.,j.. tO.i i ... iSOW Jersey to UU bu,iuuj;o vi uvuiaaiu IOO Democratic conchdutu for Governor) insisted, that, it ihe Uuioo tyei'e dissolved, tha dividing line should run North of 1'eousylvania. Dad as Disunion might bav been, it wat a light affliction compared with the impending peril of rf-uuion o,u the basis of Universal Slavery. And every man who secretly or opeply desired tuch reunion ia to-day iu bis heart a re-pudjtttort aud will twiudle the creditors gftb ltenublic if he ever khall see that he cua. . Our Financial endurance it the min cle of tho Yar. The world never taw its parallel. If every capable financier oa earth had been asked "How much money plight the Uuited States borrow during the progress or s great four years' war for the Integrity of the Union?" the average of tha answers wonld have fa-lea below One Biilioo of Dollars; yel we have borrowed nearly Three Billions much of it when oar tky wat black at miduight Uur yictoret may well excite glow of patriotic nrido; but the llebelliou't roal conqueror wat he who supplied, the money wherewith bur armies and ueets, were created organized, eoninoed, fed aud paid. : Our Fiunnces were a main object of Rebel attack. Rebel money wot 6mt to this City to be used iu betting op tbe premium on Gold. Copperheads and Rebels made large piles on tho increase of that premium, and lost litrger on itt decline. Edward Ji, Kelchum ruined his father's house aud lost Six Millions in try log to keep op tho pre.niutn after that bad be- . U.I. 'l'l... .. A M..;.,,... C0I11V lllipunoiuic . luus nvio eutim of Copperheadi tbroughout th country, each pledged to lake nojiart. oany Government 1 : WW N04G. loanj and to discailrage others from taking any One Copperhead Congressman who. was President of a Bavinirs Dank weut boote at a crit ical period aod insisted thut every dollar of the National Debt held by that liauk should be sold oat. There were Democrats who stood by their eomitry In Fiuonceal elsewhere; but tbe great mass of them avoided Government Stocks as if they bad been rank poison; they thought every oue who invested therein a fauutic or a fool; and they mean to prove him so yet.' ; - '-t i.-i ; Hence, we soe every Democratic State Convention exhibiting its ivory at the public creditors aftor this fashion: (V quota from the new platform of tbe Democracy of Ohio;) - j ."14. Retolved, That we most explicitly condemn the policy or the party ln power, iu creating thousands of millions, of dollars of government deht, and attempting to exouee, ate the holders thereof from all obligations to pay Uieir juat proportion of taxes for the sup- poit or the $tatH in which tuey reside; and thereby creatine An odious and privileged mon eyed rristocracy; and ; wo declare it to be the immediate duty of Congress and the .Estate Legislature to use all the legal and couatilu. tioual power they possess to subject money so infested to a burden of taxation, equt.1 to that imposed npon Other property for federal, qiiilo suu uiuuiuiyiw fuiiJuni-ej t., . Let ns look into this a minute: , t . n The Uuited States, iu pressing need of raon ey iu vast sums, offered certain inducements to those who would supply it namely, i: -a specified rate of interest; ?. Exemption from local taxation; it. inpayment at a ipecined day.;. Each of these is an integral port of the bargaiu mado with every holder ot a uoveru-ment bond the second oqually with the first add third. To subject those bonds to taxation would be as flagrant repudiation ns to rnfuse to pay the iutetest or the principle. He who WOUld tax them, in plain defiance of the contract, would refuse to pay them if he thought he could eucoecd in doing so. . , ' Every Copperbead and rtenel had abundant opportunities to take these bouds If he would. No questions were asked as to .the politics of subscribers: Jell, iiavis or.iiCe might nave had a Million by paying the stipulated price for them. And even to-day, when the peril Of failure in the War baa passed away, you can bny Seven Thirties at par, and some of the loaus below par. If you think the bondhold' ers havo too good a thing, remember that yon might bare been of them had you. choson may still be if yon will Walk up, gentlemen. ! 'Ihere'a no favoritismwno monopoTy l ,. . Hut consider the ainazjng folly, the sujcidal madness, of tho Copperhead demonstration. Our Debt it pearly all renewable nt early periods. . Not to speak of Dillion (uearly) of Greenbacks, which we ought to fund and re-tiro very toon, to 'bat wo may resume Specie Payment, we ow ; -; - -' 1 Amount literal. - Oft.. cent.... 6U.7BU.4uO 00. .4 per lent.... 23,D,!7 per cent.... TPJIen Pue. ..Tleceniber, lSST ' . .May, 1B67.I .On ten day's notice. 74,070,040 ,eu..n per cent. .un ten day'a notice. 3l.SM,2.'IO 0O..S per cant March, 1R04 10,000 000 oo. .8 per eent.,..Harcu, lano. 197l2i;0 00.. a percent.. June 80, lW.""-i . 234,400,000 00..7 t 10 per cent.. June 80, 1887. 6,0u0.0li0 00. .7t. lOpercent.. March 8, J8B8. ' . ' 800,008,000 00. .8 8. Ill per cent. .March 3, lSOO. , , liao.OOO.WO 00..7 t 10 per ct. (with gold eptloo at March 8, 1896. $t.704ll,348 49. , . We waut to renew all these at the lowest possible rate 4 per cent, if we can; certainly not higher than 5. If we could to day negotiate a long 4 per cent Joan of Two Billions, payable by installments' as our short loa.nl (all to, we might resume Specie Paymeut on the 1st of January next, and toon rcduw our internal taxes one-fourth to one-third, to correspond with tha reduced burden of our Debt. Every tax. payor, direct op iudiroct, it deeply concerned in our ability to fuud our short loans at a lawruta of inter est,9ince a reduction, from 6 to 4 per cent it in effect an extinction of one third of the Debt ., r : . . It tboie one man on earth to blind at not to see that suclf resolves as that above quoted are directly " calculated ' to " defeat ' the negotiation of a new loan at a low rate to ab sorb the existing loans running at high rates? Must not (very penny we take from the bondholders by local taxation be added to the rata at which future loans must be negotiated? Can we fund our Debt at all in an American Contol If such attacks on the National, credit ere persisted. iu,?--A". y, Tribune. t , ,t The Resolutions ol 179S. . , At tbe late conventions of both wingt of the Democracy at Columbus, the Virginia resolutions of 1798 were expressly recognized as the true exposition of the principles upon which our government was based." Wo have charged that these resolutions are the germ, the nest egg of secession, and rebellion. e know that they were sot np by Calhoun, and the South, as the basil of thoir notion! of State Sovereighty, and Ihatbefor nnd during tbe late rebellion, thoy were appealed to by the traitors, and- their rientfa andiympAibisers, m the great authority for tbcni in their acte of nullification and sccejsiorA. '; ' . ' It it thurefort important for all honest acok. ers of the truth to, ascertain boyond all question, or doubt, whether tbost Virginia resolutions do 0 to tbe extent claimed for (hem. If they do, if they recognize the right or a State to decide npon tha Constitutionality of the acts of Congress, aud to resist those laWt by the powers of the State, tbeo in our opinion tbey are boretical, wrong, and most mil-chiovous in thejr teaching! and tendoncy.'.'Wi aver that these resolutions oV teach Just ihesi things, and tbcreforo we denounce thorn'. But ttat our readers may have all the foe Is before tkem, we copy these rcsolaioo? eutirt Lot them be carefully preserved. ' '.' " i , l IROISU RISOLUTIOh'S Ot 1793. J?ront'nmr fit Men and btdiiion Lam to be Unconslitulional, and Defining tkt JRightt of the Stattt.l)ratcn by Mr, ' '"Lttui ViaolnuHersa or Cjiioi'tv! '. : . J . k. .1 .. "FBiiav, Bee 21, 17tf . 5 ; ''Revolted, Tliat the .Genora Auembly ot Virgiuin ,doth nnequivocally express a firm resolution to mniutain and defend the Constitution of tbe United States, and tbe Consti. tutioo of this State, against every agrjreeslon either foreign or domestic; and that they will luppoifc tut) uurnruujviifc vi uuiicu iDio-e i , - . i ..... . r , u , T'..;i...i L' , i . . . in all measures warranted by tne lormcr. ' "That (bit Assembly most solemnly decmrcs a warm attachment to the Union of tbe States, to maintaiu which It pledges lt powers; and, that for thit end. It m thetr duty to waten ovey, and oppose every infraction of thow principles which constitute tbe only basis nf that Uuion, because a faithful observance of them cau alone icure its existence and tbe public bup- piuess. . ' ' !' i "That this Assembly doth explicitly and precmptorily declurn, that it views the powers of the Federal GovTiiment, a resulting from the compnet to whictrthe States are parties, as limited by the plain suns'! ndduttition 9 ; Terms' of -A-Ivc: tii One square of 10 tines, One Insertion,..-Qrtpsuara S tnoiit!,.',..!. ;r I .; - Ona (quart 1 yuar;,, .... - ... . Two i.lsi 1 leot.t'i,... ... . . .. t . Twoaqiiare..! jfsr.:. ........ Si Column 8 months, ...... .-, . v , . i Column t ysar,...,., Column S moulllii,. Jt Column 1 JiMr,. tl 00-4 ' ttCr' 04' rroo" n oo so eo . it oa ' bO 00 80 00 00 M ' Column 3 months, 1 Column 1 year Bilnenid,'wUi''ibdliif'i llwa P" Kotlakala local Hilmon, flints anlos to oenW, ovog Ivh llrrte, tea oecjla pi ll. ' .' i ' L: AdmlnlstrkXitii,' tend, attachment, .divorce, and tr.nl Isnt aflTertlsements riin-t k"rfisid for lifnre inserlioa tbe iuslmmont crtrrstittttitig that toropeiritns no further valid than they ure aulhonwd by tho grouts enunipjatcd ia that compact; find that iu case of a'tlellborate, palpablo, and dia-' .gcrout Exercise' of Other powers, pot granted' by the said compact, tntr ftiaioj, vno are ixgre' tiet thereto, have the right and aro in duty boupd, to iutcnwiw, fot arostaig :tho progress' of the evil, and for muiutuiuiiig within their respective limits the aulhoriti., rights,, ani liberties nppirtaiiihig to them. J - - ' 'That the General .Assembly dolh nls'o'tfx-nr itjrdwirirpnet.'tkhta atiit'it hfta,-jii-sun. dry iiittsllfes, bf oa manifested by he Fiuleral1 Govartiineut, to. enlarge its poeiB by. jToreod constructions -of the eonstinitioaol charter, whifch defines tlfcm;tnd, tbatituJicatinus have' appeared of a design to expound certain geni-erui phrases (which, having been copied from' the very limited grant of poworrJ in the furrher' Artinlea nfGonfcderation. were tho lens liabla Lt be miconstnieil)noe8 to destroy, tha men n iug nnd eilect oi tue particular ruuiiictnuuui Which necessarily explains, e,ad limits the genf efal'phreses, and goas id consolidate the fctdte' by degrees into owe sovereignty, the obviour tendency and inevitable remit qf,which wogld be, to transform the present reptiblitian system of the United States into an absolute, or aV best, 0 mixed nioriarcKy. ;.l i ' ,7 Y. :;.,, "That tbe General Assembly dotli particul' larly protest against the palpubla and alarm-iug infraction! of tbd Con$titH,tiqn,o'tb two, lute cases of the 'Alien ?tid 'SeditiorJ' Aots,! passed at tho last session. of Congr; tho firs of which exorcises a p&wer uowher dlf-Eated; to tha Federal .Government, and which, by uniting legislative a,ud judicial powers to thosa-of executive, eabverls tb geijcful priuciiplet: of Iree government, as well at the particulac organization and positive provisions of. tha' Federal Constitutionjttnd the dther of which act exercises, in. like manner, a power apt dalogatod by tbe 'Conitiiutoin fcat oq tha contrary, expressly and positively forbidden by one of the ameudmouU thereto; a powsr which,, more than auv other. onebt.tO: produce uni versal alarm, because ifls 'levelled against tho: right of freely examining public;haracier4 and,1 measures, aud of free communication among the people-tlicroo'ri: which hns-vtr been justly, deemed lie only.feflectunl ghtirdinn! of every other right. .... "That this State having by, its Convention,,- which ratified the iFederal. Constitution, expressly declared, tliat' among ' other essentiali rights, the liberty of conscience and tho press caunot be cnncojled,' abridged, restrained, or-modified by any authority ofthe jttit4 States aud from its extreme anxiety , to guard' these. riShtB frr;eory ;p03siible.attacki of sophistry and ambition, having with otbor Stutes recommended anlmoDdrawit for that purpose, which, amendment was, I in nne time( anueed- to the' Constitution, it would mark a reproachful in-consistency;1 and-criminal degeneracy, if anj indifference; irir4 pow thownto tho most palpablo violation of one of tha rights, thnt dc-clured and socnred"fand to thar wbfisltTirent of a precedent which may be futal to the oth- i ..... , 1 . . . i . . "That the good people of this cpmmu wealth, having ever felt, and eotiutuog' t feel the most sincere affection for their broth!-ren of the other States',' the truest anxiety for establishing and perpetuating the Union of nf; and tbe most scrupulous fidelity to thnt Constitution' which it the pledge of tnoiual friend ship, and the instrument 01 mutual nappwets, thB General Atsombly doth, solemnly , appeal! to the like dispositions in the other States, ia confidence that they "will concur with' this commonwealth, In declaring, as it does hereby declare, that h acts aforesaid ate aaconititu-tionalfand, that the rtecassnry and, proper measures will bo taken by each for co-operating with this State, in maintaining noimpaired the authoritias,. tights,, awl liberties,. reMryed. tq the States, respectively, or fo the people, vTbat the Goverhor bo desired to transmit a copy of tbe foregoing resolution i tbe ey-ecntivo authority of each of tbe other, ,tutes, with a request that the same ma be comifiu-nicated to tbe Leglolature Thereof od that t copy be furnished t each of the ScnotOrndl Representatives re presenting this State m Ihe' Coup-reBS of tho Uuited States " ' " . '-"Attest1 .-'...WOIIN STEWART. ,f "1798, Decembor 24th, Agreed to by tha Senate. lLBROOXK, "A trnecopy from.ffie original, deposited' in the office of the Goieral Assembly. Jt)HN STEWART. :' "' Keper of Roll.' A lew word's of comment Oti' th ab6Vo.A4 '' These resolutions were sent to tha "sovt'rat , States,' and were dcrfounced by' ever enVrtf-cept Kentucky, as nubvcrsivebf thergoWrn-' ment "They have never, bec 'pttdorsed:' by them.' On tbe contrary ttey wew expressly pnftWft8'two;.'M4 total,.' to the Very idea ot ' government' ', To permit each State' to aeoicje for Kself what laws were'- eonsUti-f tioiial,.onlto act' upoVitoWuv decision; wis so manifestly absurd, ftrd ruinous, ai to Meet' with almost uulversal reprobationV And evert the authors, Jefferson', and Madison,- 'few-, yours atlcr, attempted tO'e'xrlair'tlielM'ftWuy' but failed to repudiate them as thoy should-. ; Look at the language.' Tb;' SrATsi b'o are yarties thereto, hive (he "rkiiit, aodare'tir duty bound, to interpose, ! Wbat'mfcro ah-' thority did South Carolina want than this', to iustify her rebellion. ' She thought the tariu uncoiisritationai,- ana proposa iu rc.nv, -u. Gen, Jackson threatened to hang CalhomV. 'if he attoinpted it,' and secession wat then eroA-ed. Sho, thought the ' restriction of SJayory nncoBstittttwnal, af4 tie tweeded wodct that, traitorous imbecilerKuehaoaa, and then fire nnon Fort Sumtot. "We know the rest. They justified their treason by the Yirgiuia rescrlf- . .. X "nt "A.1 ! lions of 1798. Tho Democracy ot un i I8CK, endorse r'ncl approve these same retonV tions. They'thus justify Bcsiuoa'ati4 sort. We repeat, wo denounce the Virginia relations as false, und destwetiro. ' We hold that the Snprcnio Court of the Uuited' States,' ai , not each State, must determine: whether' laws are constitutiohaT. ' 1"-";'' ' i i - " tV.lI-l '' . fit ' 'r Dietoricl, the'groat statistical aotfeorUj in Korope, eetihmtes th' pnpujatioo of tho world at 1,300,000,000, ct( whom twenty-6vt por cent, are Chrktiat. Half of th latter. 163,500,000,- art Raman t'at'aolica. Accord-tni'to a census orthw tontmrmicants of that church taken in Rome in 1865, by cr tha wafers conmimed at Easter, cl tu-'t . throushoot the world, tho nmah.-r ci rouuicants was found to bo but 4.0,:.;i" ' ' ":!Irp3ci;sr,"f!'vi tl o Ir u..-ii i:'" the' honiasrl which ' V lc' tv a. to Witncpn th -Woodwards ! H. Reeds of rinsy!v.mia V ticknt with C iloiu'l ir, fin (hi Vallnuilij.-hi'.i'ii Mid I'1 jinli'o th"ir ci'-.i t-r )i- " t anything tj'aortof 1" v;